this post was submitted on 07 Aug 2023
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So let me get this straight… Bob does something no one else does — edit messages on somewhere no one else goes, adding significant content to something no one sees — and then Bob wants to spam the world about the update with notification? Why would the world care when everyone else expect Bob to post an actual update?
Also, in this context, this wouldn’t be a bug, but rather a feature request … a feature that no one is asking for, and doesn’t make the software better except to those that doesn’t follow social norms yet still demands to get into others’ inboxes.
Instead, the appropriate behaviour is to not allow Bob to make edits after sometime (which many softwares have such feature for), and/or make edit logs visible (also a common feature), such that people who doesn’t follow expected norms cannot create mass confusion by doing things no one else does, against the grains of expected norms.
Straight away you don’t have it straight. Edits happen. The mere possibility of edits in fact encourages authors to produce ½-baked drafts in the 1st place knowing that they can always edit.
Not sure what drives this logic. If no one goes there, the post/comment is unlikely to happen in the 1st place. And with no interaction in the thread, refinements are even less likely. If you don’t have at least two people participating in a thread, there are no notifications to speak of.
Bob wants to take no action at all and let a smart system handle notifications as needed. So your attempt to “get this straight” got everything crooked. Furthermore, your proposed solution is moreso aligned with Bob pushing “spam”, as Bob’s new & separate msg forces a notification as the platform has no way of distinguishing an update from a new msg. Thus it would be treated like a new msg and a notice would be sent.
One man’s bug is another man’s feature. Luckily bugs and feature requests are handled in the same venue so it’s a red herring.
Certainly not true anymore.
One man’s bug is another man’s feature.
You’ve misunderstood where the demand is coming from. It’s not the author; it’s the recipient. Someone posted a useful reply to Alice, Alice read it, marked it as read, & then Bob made a useful update. Alice did not receive the notice of the update. This “demand” comes from the recipient (Alice), not Bob the author. The update was for the recipient’s benefit not the author’s. It’s purely incidental that Alice discovered that an update happened because #Lemmy was not smart enough to notify me of the update (unlike Mastodon which is quite a bit more mature).
That’d be fair enough, but it would not have helped in this case where the edit happened the same day.
You’re imposing too much manual labor on humans. Machines are here to work for us not the other way around.
The norms adapt to the software. When the software does an extra service for people, they abandon norms that attempt to compensate for a feature poor system. And rightly so.