Hello users of Hexbear, we are excited to start our next volunteer drive!
If you wish to contribute to https://bulletins.hexbear.net/ please visit https://git.chapo.chat/hexbear-collective/bulletins/src/branch/main/CONTRIBUTING.md and follow the instructions, if you need assistance reach out to Layla via Matrix Ella via Matrix or me via Matrix or @SeventyTwoTrillion
If you wish to contribute to site development please refer to here as our current Dev Volunteer Focus is to fork Lemmy again, this time deliberately not diverging too far from upstream so it's easier to maintain the patches and apply them on top of each new Lemmy release.
This is a large undertaking. There is no timeline, but we expect it to be a while before the site is migrated over to the finished fork.
We're still in the early stages, but the more people involved the sooner we can progress. Primarily, we need developers (Rust & TypeScript) and ops/infrastructure people. Please reach out to Layla via Matrix
Ella via Matrix or me via Matrix If you're interested in helping out. If you need help setting it up, let me know.
For more information contributing to the dev side of Hexbear please refer to this post
Anyone interested in moderating a community please send an application with the communities you would like to moderate included.
If you wish to create a new community briefly describe what it would be in a comment, in addition to sending in a mod application
Please comment to show interest or go ahead and begin the application process.
Create an Element account and send the following application via Matrix
The answers will be reviewed by the admin team, and applications will not be copied into unencrypted communication without your permission.
Application
What is your Hexbear username?
Do you have any preferred pronouns?
What are your thoughts on capitalism?
What are your thoughts on imperialism?
What are your thoughts on trans rights?
What are your thoughts on Black Lives Matter and the recent protests?
What do those protests tell you?
What are your thoughts on Veganism and Animal Liberation?
Do you have any experience with other leftist online communities? What did those experiences teach you?
What is your approach to moderation and how do you work with teams?
Do you have an account with Reddit, Discord, or Twitter? If so, may we review them?
How do you deal with online drama and people who try to start things for the sake of it?
What current comms would you be interested in moderating? Do you have any ideas for community engagement?
What is your general time availability? (Time zone, amounts, common browsing times, etc)
Element information
Element is a messaging app that lets you talk to people over the Matrix protocol.
To get started, check out this link, where you can choose to either download Element for your platform or, if on a computer, open it in a browser ("Launch Element Web").
The instructions that follow are for the desktop application and the web application, but the process is similar on all apps:
- Press "Create Account"
- We host our own Matrix server, so if you want you can change
matrix.org
tochapo.chat
. This is completely optional; users who sign up with amatrix.org
username can still talk to people withchapo.chat
username. (Note: It ischapo.chat
, nothexbear.net
. Also, registrations aren't always open onchapo.chat
; if they're not, just create an account onmatrix.org
) - Fill in a username and password
- Hit register, and you're done!
Oh, I also want to say that, given the fact that one forked version of Lemmy that HexBear is running on has bit-rotted, why would you go and do the same strategy again, and risk having a second fork start diverging from upstream and then be abandoned by another set of developers?
I think more work needs to be done to go back to upstream Lemmy and contribute directly to upstream, rather than trying to maintain a fork. Meaning, extract the meaningful and important code changes from the current fork, evaluate what could be applied to a more recent version of upstream Lemmy, migrate Hexbear.com to that version, work on upstreaming those patches back into Lemmy upstream, and slowly converge towards getting a version of Hexbear.com that runs using 100% upstream Lemmy, and have features be developed against upstream Lemmy.
This will be a multi-year process. The hole got dug, now we need to dig ourselves out.
This is pretty much what has been going on and notable progress has been made towards that goal.
I imagined so. I just didn't see it documented anywhere so I figured throwing a guess out as to what needs to be done would generate discussion
Ultimately the goal is winding down the scope of the project as much as possible, so that maintenance becomes manageable. Getting all of our changes upstreamed to Lemmy would bring maintenance down to zero, but there are certain features which have been rejected, so this isn't possible. We need to maintain some amount of custom features, and the best way to do it seems to be reimplementing them cleanly on top of Lemmy in a way which has minimal impact on the APIs, database structure, and unrelated code.
This should make rebasing hexbear on Lemmy releases relatively trivial (it is basically impossible currently), and should also make it easier to pitch new features over to them if they want them.
Indeed, we should consult them before developing new features, to maximize the likelyhood of their inclusion upstream, but they won't accept all of it.
That’s the exact plan iirc, although I haven’t been involved with the project for a while. “Reforking” is probably imprecise phrasing to describe this newest effort. Scope for this current work is developing a patch for upstream Lemmy with the minimum amount of changes that we can have.
Easy example of why running 100% of Lemmy isn’t feasible:
From what I remember, the main Lemmy devs were uninterested in pronoun tags. That’s ironic considering it’s a more effective way to piss off bigots and reactionaries than the extremely clunky hardcoded slur filter.
The site admins and maintainers of this project probably have a good working relationship with the Lemmy devs they want to maintain, which I understand. I personally decided to focus on other projects previously after giving up on the Lemmy devs extremely slow turnaround on accepting any PRs upstream.
That was before this patching strategy was announced, which I might volunteer for, although I’m currently dealing with health / medical problems that limit how much knowledge work I can do.
Final edit:
If anyone here knows the lemmy devs, I would strongly suggest pitching pronoun tags to them as a way to deter bigots / reactionaries.
I hope they’re not personally against pronouns for ideological reasons, but if they are that is also something I think myself and other trans people would like to know.
This is partially due to the quality of the code. IIRC, they were initially interested in a user tagging system, which is why I think a fresh proposal emulating the way Mastodon does this is worth it. This data is already federated in practice (on Masto) and we could potentially bring compatibility with the same protocol over to Lemmy. I need to catch up with the current state of Lemmy though.
Expanded my comment right before you commented, sorry! Are you involved with this newest effort? That’s really encouraging, I recognize you from around the original dev project.
I'm trying to get back on the horse.
:bloomer:
You love to see it!
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Separate thought: Pronouns for users seems like a separate feature than general user tags, though, correct? I’m trying to imagine how that would work for federation.
Having pronouns and general user tags as the same feature seems like it would fill the site with a bunch of randos from other lemmy instances with user tags that then displayed in the pronoun field here with phrases like “cum/town” or “PROUD PATSOC”.
Hoping the Lemmy devs have a plan for this, honestly a little surprised they seem to be focused on trying to shoe-horn pronouns in.
Edit: whoops, triple posted
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That's not a fork.
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Again. That's not a fork. You made a reimplementation, in a different language that was API compatible with the original Rust backend.