The rules for bots # Bots should be clearly prompted by a command # Bots that always post without human intervention are noisy and are often unwanted.
Bots should not act in a community without mods from that community being contacted first # Moderators should not have to chase down the bots being u...
After some discussions in !chat, we came up with the conclusion we should adopt rules surrounding bots.
We'll ban bots which we are aware of that currently don't follow these rules and contact their creators. Please report bots that don't follow these.
These are per-instance stats (I stripped other instances than yours). If I'm not mistaken, downvotes are disabled on Beehaw, so the like ratio doesn't say much, but other numbers still could:
-------------------- ---------- --------- ----------- ------------ ---------------------
Instance Comments Upvotes Downvotes Like ratio Upvotes per comment
-------------------- ---------- --------- ----------- ------------ ---------------------
beehaw.org 28 236 0 100.00% 8.43
Edit: The stats are generated by this - while it's not the cleanest code I've ever written, I think it's pretty readable and everyone can see that the stats are not some weird numbers to make it look better than it is.
This comment takes up most of the screen space on my mobile device. I don't consider this to be a TL;DR. At this rate, I'd opt to just read the article in question instead.
The other problem is that lengthy TL;DRs like this obstruct comments, making it annoying to scroll past for those of who are on mobile devices. I could block the bot of course, but I don't want to - I do want a legit TL;DR, not a reworded article.
Here's my attempt at generating a TL;DR of the mentioned article, using ChatGPT:
Two manuscripts published on the arXiv pre-peer-review repository claim to have synthesized a room-temperature superconductor, LK-99. This superconductor is a variation of lead apatite, and allegedly operates not only at room temperature but also above water's boiling point, at regular pressures. The synthesis process is complex, yielding potential variations in the final product. Early attempts to reproduce these findings have shown mixed results, adding to the intrigue and uncertainty surrounding the material's properties. While these claims could potentially revolutionize the field, their validation would give rise to further challenges about how to transform this material into a practical, high-current-carrying form. The upcoming period is likely to see intense activity from labs worldwide in their efforts to corroborate these results, which could significantly accelerate the emergence of a scientific consensus.
IMO, this is what a TL;DR should look like - a single paragraph and under 150 words.
To be fair, the TL;DR would be a lot shorter if the breaks between sentences were removed. I personally draw the line at around 200 words for a summary, so the 183 words in the summary is a bit long but still a reasonable TL;DR for an article.
Since Lemmy implements spoiler tags, I think wrapping the summary in a spoiler tag would be a way to solve the length problem.
I love the idea of wrapping the summary in a spoiler tag! I think that would be a great idea to be implemented for bots like that and would solve a lot of this. That's a great idea you've had and I thank you for sharing it!
The one here though seems to be producing a large summary instead of just TL;DR
I kinda prefer this though, IMO condensing an article down into a one or a few sentences could make it difficult to facilitate a "healthy" discussion
A really miniscule TL;DR seems more likely for a bunch of assumptions to be made based on that alone, and increase the likelihood of users calling each other out for not actually reading the article.
This comment takes up most of the screen space on my mobile device
Oh ☹️ I decreased the font size for comments on my mobile so there was a higher content density but that might not work for you
My thoughts are mostly that I wish this were integrated in Lemmy because of a couple reasons:
People might be interested to see comments, see that there's one in a thread only to realize it's a bot
The sorting algorithm of lemmy makes no difference between bots and users so it can give a much higher importance to posts which attract bots (namely news)
I get what you're getting at there, but I don't think it would necessarily be an issue. I think that if you were to put the summary itself under the spoiler and nothing else, it would be reasonable to provide a couple more lines to explain the bot. I'd think that even with a couple of extra lines of copy it would take less real estate most of the time than if the bot continued to just provide the summary and two lines.
I'm also recalling that AutoTLDR on Reddit had some extra bits like an FAQ and providing extended summaries. Links to that stuff might also help to balance your visibility. I think the bulk of your screen real estate comes from the summary, so this content would be less of an issue in comparison.
🤖 I'm a bot that summarizes online articles! This summary is X% shorter than the article:
Summary in spoiler
[Filler text follows] Oh, using ChatGPT to generate filler text, are we? How delightfully modern! Gone are the days of the monotonous "lorem ipsum" that Latin scholars might swoon over. Now, we can be graced with filler text in English, tailored to our whims by a machine that's fluent in more than just dead languages. Let's all take a moment to applaud the user's avant-garde approach to filling that empty space on a webpage.
But wait, there's more to this cutting-edge decision. Not only have we replaced a centuries-old tradition with a dash of AI flair, but we've also managed to make filler text even more inconsequential and pretentious. Why stick with the tried and true when you can have a machine generate something that's equally irrelevant but far more verbose? Truly, the future of procrastination is here, and it's dressed in a cloak of technological grandiosity. Bravo!
Although I do like the idea of having some other information outside of the spoiler, I'm of the opinion that bots should distinguish themselves with the bot flag, and no more. The message should introduce the content, rather than the bot itself, and information about the bot should go in the bot's bio.
Here's a summary of the article! This summary is 100% shorter than the article:
Admittedly, I agree with you in making the footprint leaner if it can be helped. The Lemmy UI and best practices working with that would ideally handle flagging the bot and let people make informed decisions from there.
I was trying to strike a balance between keeping it lean and keeping it visible. @rikudou’s concern was that spoiler folding would lead to people missing the bot as they scanned through the comments. At least with how Lemmy UI currently is, I have to concede that I think they have a point. Last I checked on the default Lemmy UI theme at least, the Bot flag is relatively easy to miss scanning through comments. Moderator and Administrator icons are already relatively low-key, but the Bot flag currently uses the more discrete body text color and no outlining. I didn’t even know bots had a name flag until you pointed it out.
It’s a delicate balance between keeping the comment reasonably slim but also reasonably visible. I think I was trying to come up with a solution that works with the limitations as-is, but your recommendation is definitely what we ought to go with in the long-term if we can make it happen. It seems to me like it would be better to solve a fair chunk of this through the UI itself rather than bulking up the copy.
I think adding 🤖 makes it stand out enough that even while skimming, I'd stop to look at what that is. Honestly this proposed format seems great, since it's short but stands out, and I can "opt-into" reading the tl;dr by clicking the spoiler.
Would it be possible for the bot to DM us instead when communities decide to ban/restrict them for whatever reason?
I've found this bot incredibly useful personally, and I assume the community does too, looking at various Lemmy posts where the TLDR bot upvotes closely follow the OP upvotes (sometimes exceeding it)
Note - I'm not a beehaw user, for anyone reading whose apps do not show my instance.
I'm not sure how to properly tag a user to where they'll definitely get a notification, so I wanted to reply directly to you to make sure you've seen the idea mentioned here in this comment about maybe wrapping the summaries in spoiler tags so that those who want to read it easily can and so that they don't automatically take up so much space to scroll past on smaller screens and those that don't want them maybe aren't as bothered (for lack of being able to think of a better word to use here) by them.
I do appreciate TL:DR; bots but/and I think the spoiler tags idea is a great idea and I would love to see it implemented, if you feel that's something you'd like to do. :)
I'm just trying to understand, generally speaking, how the bot works. It appears to me that the bot is looking for posted articles that exceed a certain word count threshold. If it finds these, then it creates a summary and posts this as a comment. Am I understanding this correctly?
It has support for specific news sites, I don't want to rely on some automatic text extraction because those are prone to breaking. Here are the content extractors themselves, each for one site. If a post that contains a link to any of the supported sites is found across all of Lemmy (that the bot can see), it extracts the text and then summarizes it using this. It takes 6 sentences directly from the article that look most important to the machine learning model it uses. Then it posts it as a comment.