this post was submitted on 04 May 2024
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Lemmy Apps

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Reddy is a small app that I've developped over the past few days, and I want to show it to you so you can give me your thoughts, advices and ideas for the app.

Reddy is a GTK Linux app that takes an image (PNG, JPEG, GIF) at random in a subreddit and allows you to repost it in any Lemmy community. I made it principally to share content easily on Lemmy, as Reddit becomes more and more abusive and I think having copies of some content of reddit here on Lemmy is not a bad idea.

The app comes with a few restriction to prevent abuse:

  • You cannot repost the image twice in the same community
  • The reddit post link will always be shown in the body of the post. To give credit where credit is due.

Also, the app fetch the title and NSFW status of the reddit post automatically, but you can change it as needed.

The app require a reddit API client id/secret (The free API seems to still be working as of now) and a Lemmy account.

I'd love to hear your thoughts about such app, if you have any concerns as an user or as an instance owner please share your thoughts!

EDIT: Reddy is out for everyone to try out on Flathub: https://flathub.org/apps/net.krafting.Reddy

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[–] [email protected] 1 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) (1 children)

Wishing won’t ever help that’s true, but I’m doing my part in the best way I can!

You're doing good, TY for contributing.

FYI, while I am responding to you directly, I'm also 'Speaking to the Choir' as in may, as there's usually a negative pushback to cloning Reddit content onto Lemmy.

I always just assume it's Reddit bots trying not to lose the only advantage they have, the content they already hold/contain.

But it also could just be Lemmy users who only want a 'pure' experience, and 'larger population / market share' and success be damned.

~Anti~ ~Commercial-AI~ ~license~ ~(CC~ ~BY-NC-SA~ ~4.0)~

[–] [email protected] 1 points 6 months ago (1 children)

there's usually a negative pushback to cloning Reddit content onto Lemmy.

Bots have their utility, but should be treated with caution, as they have the risk of flooding small communities with posts which garner zero comments. It might be a good idea to aim for no more than 50% of posts (on average) being from bots.

@[email protected], would there be a way to incorporate some form of rate-limiting based on the level of human activity in the community?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 6 months ago

See : https://lemmy.world/comment/9863709

Also, rate limiting should be implemented at the lemmy server level (if someone wanted to flood/spam a community he could write a simple script that post 1000 post per seconds easily)

Plus there are already real bot software that repost reddit content without human approbation, this app doesn't repost automatically without the user input.

But I totally understand this concern. And I'll see if this app gets abused or anything that might deteriorate our Lemmy experience.