掲示板 Forums - [Discussion] Considering major changes to this forum
Top > 会話 / General discussion > General Discussion Getting the posts
Top > 会話 / General discussion > General Discussion
What if instead of a time limit on threads, there is a limit to how many posts users can post per day?
I certainly understand where this is coming from, but I’m concerned about unintended side effects of this particular proposal. It seems to me that users have been pretty good at self-policing once Michael has made his concerns clear, but there are always new users, and new situations.
My concern with slow rolling the general discussion forums is that the self-policing will evaporate as users try to get around it, especially by posting in other forums.
Is it possible to make a few trusted users like 'moderators' to Help you? (Maybe not.)
What if we 'report' ? Could it keep things under control or would it just make even more work for you?
Why not add more rules for the forums? For regulation, I think a few simple ones may make a huge difference! like: "Stay on topic" ; "Don't spam" ; "Use the 好き button for agreement!" ; "Instead of numerous of people repeating the same ' LOL' just Don't. It's not a helpful for learners! ; "Don't take over others' threads to greet friends!" ; "Please, consider newcomers who CAN'T keep up and read the whole thread!" ; "Consider the heart of renshuu and keep it a Japanese learning place! Don't make it a chat room" ; "Delete unnesesary messages!" etc. ALL of the listed are kinda reffering to same thing!!! Was imagining it's a good idea, if someone smarter than myself gives it a structure in 3 or 4 short rules
???
We can "drop you a line"... can we have mail in renshuu? (No?) How about Announcement everyone gets! ❝To "drop a line" for connection purpose and delete it after you've found your buddy, cuz it's not really helpful for anyone!❞ Like the Japanese lessons in resources/New year cards! (If THAT isn't understandable, Idk)
Not sure if this is ideas or suggestion! Depends, is it helpful? マイコ―先生、本当にありがとうございました。
I actually have been wanting to ask about the rule button, aside from adding rules I also think it should be more visible, maybe it's stupid but for a while I had forgotten it exists and wasn't able to find it because it blends in so much with the UI, It's the same color as the other buttons around it. Could the color be changed or a border added around it or something?
As someone who’s been an active member of the forums, I wanted to offer a few thoughts and suggestions that might help with the concerns you raised :
1. While I understand Anything Goes is meant to be casual, lately there have been a lot of threads that feel completely unrelated, even to general discussion.
2. Limit how often users can post in General Discussion to slow things down and make space for others to join.
3. Gently remind users to keep posts meaningful and somewhat on-topic, even in Anything Goes.
4. Some recent threads in Anything Goes have little to no real content and dont add value to the community. I think it would help if clearly offtopic or meaningless posts were removed or at least reviewed regularly. This could help improve the overall quality and make the space more welcoming to new users.
Thank you for the comments so far. Let me address what I can.
1. I am not interested in adding moderators. That is a significant time investment (and trust investment) to setting up a moderating system. Currently, rule-breaking posts are very rare, and are almost always reported by multiple users when they appear. However, as someone else put it, the majority of these conversations are staying within the official rules, but are not content that really belong on a learning system aimed at all ages. (This is also why DMs were removed on renshuu - my inability to handle potential issues in private conversations).
2. I do not think adding more rules will really fix it - rules need to be fairly clear, otherwise it becomes relatively easy to skirt by them. For example, "no spam" would be hard to enforce in the current megathreads.
At its core, though, it is a mismatch between how some users are using the "anything goes" forum and how I feel would be ideal for the majority of users. To put it simply, this is not a place for "conversations" - we have numerous channels on our discord server for that exact purpose. This is for discussions - those are longer messages between (often) larger numbers of people, with less of an immediate back and forth. I hope this is clear enough of a distinction.
If you could replace the content of a forum thread with a phone call or a voice chat, then it would be much more appropriate to use discord, or take it off of renshuu.
To be clear, my goal is not to say "don't converse" - it's to say "we have a better infrastructure for it, so please continue to do it, just use the right tools for the job."
renshuu is a 2-person company, but while my wife does amazing work with the artwork, voices, sentences, etc., I do the development, maintenance, user-support, and day-to-day. We have no desire to make the company bigger - that would be a lot of stress for us, we'd need to monetize more of renshuu (which we don't want to do), and I feel that renshuu would cease to be what so many people like about it. So we need to be smart about the decisions we make so that something like a subsection of the forums requires so much time/energy from me that the core of renshuu (the learning!) suffers.
How about a system similar to the diminishing returns on experience gain?
You could add a cost (starting at 0) that grows exponentially with each subsequent forum post. For example, you could use the bonus points you get from duplicate Kao coins. This cost would then reset every day (or week).
This would, hopefully, nudge users to focus more on learning and less on spamming the forums. Depending on how it's balanced, it shouldn't have much of an impact (if any) on the average user.
Basically, it would act as a soft cap, that's linked to the platform's primary function (learning Japanese). Doesn't have to be Kao coin points, that was just an example.
I feel like it shouldn't be too difficult to implement (from a technical point of view), given DR on experience already exists. Biggest challenge would be balancing the cost.
I'm new and don't really use forums in general, so I might be missing some obvious problems, but I though I'd share.
Rather than changing the forums, rules, or anything like that, I would suggest dealing with the problem directly i.e. lock the problem threads, and ask the 8 people that generate the 80% of the messages to relocate their conversation(s) off the Renshuu forums.
Maybe there could also be a system where after 2 years of that the forum could be deleted, not the main ones but the forums which is kinda irrelevant
I have never used the anything goes part of the forum during the 2 plus years I am on renshuu. I took a look at it just now and realized why. I am here solely to improve my Japanese, not to interact with minors or users who give the appearance of being minors.
I wouldn't miss it if it's closed down tomorrow.
Deleting old posts does not really solve the issue.
After thinking about this a lot and feeling no small amount of anxiety over this, I am planning to implement the following rules. I'm putting them here to get any final feedback (or wording tweaks, to make it easier to understand). I will also make it so all posters will need to read the rules once before posting in the future.
These rules will be across all forums on renshuu. Furthermore, current threads that do not adhere to these rules will be given 72 hours after posting of the rules before they are locked.
1. Overly personal conversations, or extended conversations between a small number of users are not allowed. We recommend you join our Discord server (under Community in the menu).
2. No drama, or personal (private issues) are allowed. If the content would not be appropriate for a mixed group of family, friends, and strangers, then it does not belong here.
I will take feedback on these two rules for 24 hours before publishing the final versions.
Edit: made a small clarification on #1
1. Both rules are quite vague. I assume on purpose to give room for flexibility when moderating. Not really an issue as far as I'm concerned.
2. When showing the rules to first-time posters, you might want to make sure they aren't just scrolling past them like most of us do with EULAs. Maybe add a small delay before they can hit "Accept," or a checkbox for each rule? Maybe you already have something in mind and this isn't an issue.
Overall, I don't see anything wrong with your approach. Enforcement might be an issue, but it should alleviate the problem to a point where the moderation workload is manageable.
By the way, how will these rules be enforced? They seem rather subjective.
I think there needs to be a bit of leeway in order to catch certain behaviors that might be following the letter of the rule, but not the spirit.
The second rule is only we've had on the discord server since its inception, and we have had very few issues - 99.9% of users have understood the intent of the rules, and the rules have allowed us to warn, and in the few cases where the warnings were not heeded, act in that 0.1% of the time.
I feel the same will be true here. I am extremely fortunate in that the overwhelming majority of learners on renshuu want to protect what we have, which is a quiet, supportive, friendly place that hasn't fallen to a lot of issues that plague social media, other general purpose forums, etc.
Got it. I was just wondering how you'd catch rule breakers, given that the forums (as far as I'm aware) don't have the same comprehensive moderation tools as Discord.
Honestly, as long as users are required to read the rules before being able to post, there really shouldn't be any issues. I think most people don't have a problem with following rules. It's just a matter of whether or not they're aware of them in the first place.
I made a few final changes for clarity, and the new rules are published. It does require users to tap a button before posting. They may or may not read it, but tapping the button is enough for me to presume they agree with the rules.
I am hoping that this results in an improvement in the forums. I'll also be adjusting the names of some of the forums slightly to better reflect what is expected (although I can only go into so much detail).
I will also be posting in the current threads that now do not align with the new rules, and will give them 72 hours before locking (but not deleting them).
One more thing: this was in a private discussion with a user, but I wanted to post it here.
I know that the decision I made is not going to go over well with everyone, but it is my hope that I was clear enough that I not only think this will be better for renshuu users as a whole, but for me, too. It's easy (I do it too) to look at a site or app and not see the person/people behind it (and there are plenty of places where it's impossible to actually talk to someone), but I work full-time on renshuu, and it is both FUN and VERY STRESSFUL. If money was not an issue, I could (of course, I wouldn't) drop renshuu tomorrow and I can almost guarantee that my migraines would disappear.
So in the end, I'm also looking to find a balance so that I can remain mentally and emotionally healthy so that I can continue to work to help everyone learn and enjoy Japanese. More so than renshuu as a business, this is where I find my joy as a teacher, and I want to do it for as long as I can.
I completely understand your decision. I can't imagine what it's like running all of this by yourself, and not only do you do an incredible job, you stay so well-connected with your users as well. I think I can speak for all of us when I say that you are completely justified in making this choice for the future of Renshuu.