question mainly to proponents of quote posts, but anyone can respond:
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@trwnh this also distinguishes things majorly from forum style inline quoting which is mostly about referring to pieces of a previous message
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Peter Toft JĆølvingreplied to infinite love ā“³ last edited by
@trwnh Maybe I'm not getting what you're trying to achieve. My point was that it will probably be impossible to enumerate every kind of relationship between two posts. We have "replies", "for example", "see also", "source", "rebuttal", "review", and the list goes on.
Am I missing what you're after? -
@foolishowl interesting. for
> like a review of another microblog post or thread
is there any meaning attached to the relationship, or is the meaning in the act?
> a deliberate change of context, making it a special case of a reply
these are semantically `context` and `inReplyTo`. how does a quote differ from replying to something but changing the context?
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DJ Sundog - from the toot-labreplied to infinite love ā“³ last edited by
@trwnh been pondering this. I think the cleanest relationship I've been able to come up with is that a quote post recontextualizes the original post. it removes it from its original context and places it in a new context.
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infinite love ā“³replied to NowWeAreAllTom last edited by
@tom @erincandescent so is it always a response, or only sometimes? is emphasis/explanation a type of response?
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Haelwenn /ŃŠ»Š²ŃŠ½/ :triskell:replied to Erin š½āØ last edited by@erincandescent @trwnh Yeah that and here one way I like using quotes is to somewhat fork the thread, like to avoid derailing the existing discussion.
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@trwnh when I think about it, ActivityStreams 1 had a comment objectType. This is distinct from note, which top level posts typically were.
In AS1 you might have expressed "quote semantics" with a non-comment reply -
@trwnh As I understand it, the main concerns are also the main reasons it would be useful: the ability to easily find the original poster, also the ability to reframe the post into a context more relevant to your stream.
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@tech_himbo well sure, but thatās āmeaningā in a functional sense as tou point out. like intention.
āsemanticsā here is descriptive. it asks āwhat is the nature of the relationship between the current thing and the linked thingā. if viewing a āquote postā in isolation, can we represent it through a combination of existing properties, or does it deserve its own new property?
we have `context`, inReplyTo`, `to` or `cc` or `audience`, even `tag` or `attachment`, and so on. can we just use these?
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the car lane disrespecterreplied to infinite love ā“³ last edited by
@trwnh the relationship between a quoted post and the one that quotes it is that of a dunk and a dunkee. a strawman and the argument that shreds it. a screencap and the accompanying roast text.
its purpose is to elevate the quoter literally above the quoted and profit off the difference.I fuckin' hate quote shit
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infinite love ā“³replied to Peter Toft JĆølving last edited by
@joelving iām trying to do protocol stuff, even knowledge modeling.
we have context, audience, to, cc, inReplyTo, tag, attachment ā do we need quote/quoteOf?
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ŠŃŠøŠ³Š¾ŃŠøŠ¹ ŠŠ»ŃŃŠ½ŠøŠŗŠ¾Š²replied to infinite love ā“³ last edited by
To me, in Smithereen, it's a link preview that's getting some special treatment and that you create with a dedicated UI. The difference between quotes and link previews is that I don't do link previews yet. The semantic relationship is the same as when I link something in my own post. To quote something means to include it as part of your own post, possibly adding your own comment, to have a conversation about it with your followers.
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@trwnh @darius In practical terms, I think the most important implication of that is that when I tap on it, my client should open it as a post, not a webpage. Also, embedded media should be live.
There are open UI questions about whether other things about the quoted post should be inherited by the parent, things like content warnings (probably) and @ mentions (probably not), but those all depend on semantically understanding that the thing is a post to start with.
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Anthony Soracereplied to infinite love ā“³ last edited by
@trwnh @darius I think the difference between a quote post and a simple link preview is that I expect the quote post to be more āliveā. I think from a semantic perspective that means that whatever software is doing the reading understand that it is a post. I think (but I am not certain) that was missing right now, semantically, is about the post part, not the quoting per se.
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NowWeAreAllTomreplied to infinite love ā“³ last edited by
@trwnh No, not always.
For instance, let's say a podcast makes a post about their new episode. I loved the episode so I want to share it to my followers.
I could just boost if, but instead I "quote post", adding: "whoa, great new episode of this podcast. I've you've ever been curious to check the show out this would be a good one to start with."
I would not consider that a "response" because it's not addressing the original poster
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@trwnh For me, itās exactly what itās called: a quote. If Iām quoting someone elseās post, the relationship is closer to āquoting + citing the sourceā, but if Iām quoting my own post, the relationship is āquoting = highlighting a specific previous statement, e.g. as a follow-upā.
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infinite love ā“³replied to DJ Sundog - from the toot-lab last edited by
@djsundog so is it enough to change the `context`, or is there something else missing?
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@trwnh the quote post is a commentary/reaction/repost+. A Quote-post only makes sense if the post you're quoting itself is necessary for your post to make sense. The relationship is important (otherwise a screenshot would work) it's kind of a reply that wants to either address a different audience, wants to shift the conversation to a different aspect of the original discourse etc.
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infinite love ā“³replied to Haelwenn /ŃŠ»Š²ŃŠ½/ :triskell: last edited by
@lanodan @erincandescent so is it basically `inReplyTo` but setting a different `context`
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@trwnh is the relationship between a thing i wrote and another thing to which itās related not a function of my intentions? like, if i āboostā a post, without any other context, that act has a pretty limited meaning; itās essentially broadcasting. but if i āendorseā a post, the act of endorsing rather than simply boosting conveys a distinct relationship between my action and that post; itās distinct because endorsement means something very specific