I think it would be great to have a archive so that the various documentation, comments and hacks / workarounds could be searched.
The reason I ask is because they block VPN traffic, restrict some content behind a login wall and I have blacklisted them from my DNS so I plan on never returning.
But I find myself lacking odd tips from the Sway community and other communities.
The archive warriors are downloading Reddit for a while already. 15.6 billion items and counting. You can help too:
It just lists name of people archiving reddit. where can I get the archived data. do I have to ask one of those people to send me a zip file?
The data is integrated into the Internet archive and available e.g. via the way back machine. Not sure if you can get the whole reddit dataset.
It’s not an archive but RedLib provides an alternative frontend which deals with most of the hostile design
Which you can use in conjunction with LibRedirect
As a sidenote, you can get around the VPN block with Redlib by just adding
safe-
to the start of most reddit URLs. So like instead ofreddit.com/r/linux
or whatever you can dosafereddit.com/r/linux
and it should work without needing a login.There is lemmit.online which does this purely.
It is pretty busy but may already do some of it. You could request a nieche and very useful community like the sway one. Or use your own server to fetch these results and post to the open Web.
Unfortunately they don’t take requests for new subreddits anymore. In addition, they don’t mirror comments so in terms of answers to questions it’s probably not that helpful.
I mean, if people here don’t like how Reddit took advantage of user comment data, why should we archive the same without consent from the people who wrote them? Legally speaking Reddit holds the copyright also.
so just use chatgpt or gemini - pretty sure they sucked in all of reddit to form their KB
using llm ai for tech support is monumentally stupid lmao
How is it worse than taking advise off of the Internet? At the end of the day you need to be aware of what you are doing.
Mistral has helped me with a variety of tasks such as finding tools and choosing ZFS geometry
BTW - thanks for Mistral. Another tool in the box!
Quite right!
You need to take it all (AI or internet searches) with a huge pinch of salt. Even ye olde text books were not infallible and often out of date, so sodium chloride was also required even then.
The code either works or it doesn’t - it’s all in the testing. If you deploy AI suggestions without thought you deserve the consequences.