this post was submitted on 05 Feb 2025
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If you are not aware, sportbots is a project that mirrors Twitter accounts from popular sport reporters, players and the leagues themselves. These bots are presented as regular ActivityPub actors, which means that they can be followed from Mastodon and any other AP service that is oriented towards microblogging.

With my work on Fediverser and the ActivityPub Toolkit, I'm realizing that we could do something similar for Lemmy. The Fediverser system could keep a database of these bots accounts and then map them to the relevant Lemmy instances/communities.

I'd like to get some opinions on how best to do this. Here are some of my ideas, in order of preference:

  1. Reach out to the developer behind sportbots.xyz and ask them to add this integration directly, to make sure that the bots post not just to Mastodon-like systems, but to groups as well.

    Pros: it can be very straightforward. No new bots being created on the Fediverse.

    Cons: the code seems to be closed, so we have to rely on the dev to implement this.

  2. Add the functionality to Fediverser to map mastodon/twitter/bluesky accounts to Lemmy mirror bots, and also map these accounts to the specific communities where they should be posting.

    Pros: Accounts could be eventually be used by the real owner. Open source.

    Cons: More bots in the Fediverse (not at alien.top scale, though). Not that many Lemmy admins seem interested in deploying Fediverser so far.

  3. Create a separate project from Fediverser that does what sportbots is doing, but focused on Lemmy.

    Pros: most flexible. Could be easier for other people to run it if interested. I would be sure to open source it.

    Cons: It's yet-another project that I would be taking on, and I don't have any more bandwidth for new projects unless they are guaranteed to bring some revenue.

Please, let's avoid any "who cares about sports?" or "I only want organic content here" type of discussion. We need content here if we want to get more people to stay active and if you don't care about sports or the bots, just feel free to block them.

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[–] [email protected] 33 points 1 day ago (3 children)

No. Account mirroring and bot posts go against the essential nature of social threaded link aggregation. I see sportsbots is already a Mastodon project which makes much more sense because microblogging has a follow-the-user rather than a follow-the-community model. Lemmy is follow-the-community. If there is interest in this content, users will create a Lemmy community and post content there. Maybe they will even link to the sportsbots mirror. But don’t just set up a script to do it for you, that’s just something people are going to block.

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[–] [email protected] 16 points 1 day ago (3 children)

I think there has to be some level of curation. I set up a queue to post loops to [email protected], but I didn't just write a script that posts everything. I use Loops myself and add things I think are interesting to the queue to be posted. It's a lot of manual work, but I'm happy to do it for now to help grow the Fediverse, and I enjoy watching the loops anyways.

You could accomplish this with more automatic curation, such as automatically reposting stuff that's highly upvoted or has some other signal that it's interesting. I didn't do that for Loops because there's a lot of stuff that's highly-upvoted and is just stuff scraped from TikTok and I don't care for those. I would probably use this approach if I didn't want to wade through myself to find signal.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 day ago (2 children)

You're one of the big posters I don't mind seeing and now it makes sense why. The way so many of the other top posters (well, two in particular but I won't name them) post feels so....soulless. Either spamming 20 memes they saved off Instagram that day in 10 minutes or posting Reddit's Greatest Hits.

As much as I'd love if everything was OC, I MUCH prefer the curated approach to making Lemmy yet another bucket to archive everything from every other site

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I always enjoy seeing pug Jesus posts cause he posts little context blurbs for his history memes so I get to learn about stuff, and sometimes I've asked him stuff and he's taught me all about certain parts of history ☺️

His memes come with story time lol.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 day ago (2 children)

I feel guilty about my last comment and at the risk of narrowing down who I mean, I want to be clear that Pug is ABSOLUTELY NOT who I was referring to. I love their thoughtful posting habits.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 15 hours ago

Lol, you're fine, it just made me remember I appreciate them and it seemed as good an opportunity as any to share :)

Have a good one!

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Pug is ABSOLUTELY NOT who I was referring to

That's the risk when you don't explitely tell who you have in mind 😄

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Well it ain't Blaze either lol

The two I had in mind rarely comment so I doubt I'll ever see this. They might as well be bots.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago

Ah, I think I know the ones, especially if they rarely comment

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 day ago

Thanks, I appreciate hearing it!

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 day ago

Reposting based on a signal sounds like the best idea.

Because we kinda have the alternative in place: lemmit chose the way of replicating reddit posts onto a committed instance. That means that someone still has to manually go, look at - for example the F1 - lemmit, choose an interesting post there and cross-post it to the relevant lemmy community.

If the repost into a relevant lemmy community happened automatically based on a signal, that would take off work from users.

Could that signal be the number of interactions in activitypub for a sportsbots post? Or would it be the Twitter interactions?

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 day ago

I'm old enough to remember when Reddit had a built-in RSS feed reader. You could add the RSS feeds you'd like to follow and it would present it to you on a separate page. But the cool thing is that you could up/downvote it like any other link. This meant that every blog entry could become a submission on its own, and all the user had to do was upvote it.

I tried to build something similar on the Fediverser page, but to this there is still too much friction. People need to:

  • Sign up to the Fediverser site
  • Become a community ambassador
  • Add different RSS feeds as content sources
  • Get in the habit of visiting the site to repost the contents they think it's interesting.
[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

If you intend to create inorganic content like that maybe the best solution would be a dedicated community so that folks who are happy to have updates and be able to discuss with folks can go there, and other folks can avoid it

You might also be able to organize with certain communities and discuss what kinda stuff they'd appreciate you mirroing or posting automatically. But I wouldn't go doing it without talking with the folks running those comms personally.

I get that's not what you wanna discuss, but as I think you can see that's pretty important to the culture of this space for a lot of people, and anything you build will be more successful if you're mindful of that human aspect. It's at least as important as any technical choice, if not more

(Overlooking the human or social considerations for purely technical ones is a open source community pet-peeve of mine. Everything here is intrinsically collaborative and needs to be pro-social to truly succeed.)

Regardless, I hope you're able to support the sports discussions on Lemmy you wanna see thrive. Just remember, more content than people can engage with dilutes the engagement and makes it harder for folks to find themselves in the same space such that human interaction can happen. Ultimately that's the point of online social spaces :)

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

If you intend to create inorganic content like that maybe the best solution would be a dedicated community so that folks who are happy to have updates and be able to discuss with folks can go there, and other folks can avoid it

That is the exact reason why I ended up creating 15+ topic-specific instances, plus alien.top when I started mirroring reddit content. The idea was that the bots would live on alien.top (and could be taken over by their real owner, when they authenticated via Reddit) and all these instances and communities were to be the destination of the posts.

Turns out that even with this separation, some people would still complain about their feed being "taken over" by alien.top. So, people could simply avoid it by simply curating their own feeds and stop "browsing by all".

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (15 children)

Right, but browsing by all is nice to be able to do 😅 if you're posting so much all at the same time that it's flooding "c/all" or whatever, then I'm not surprised people would be unhappy

They had a way of engaging with the platform they were happy with, so if abnormal posting patterns of inorganic content kinda ruined that for them, of course they're gonna be unhappy about it 😅

Its not unreasonable for people to want the option to use c/all and/or their front page at their discretion, that's why both are there lol. I visit both regularly for different reasons. My feed is mostly small niche communities and then I like to go check out the larger global discussions

I don't think it's particularly fair to argue "well if everyone just engages with this platform in one narrow way (in spite of it having other options baked into it) they wouldn't have this problem"

Like... Sure, but they might not want to engage with it in that one very narrow way 😅 and that'd be entirely valid.

When chatting with the guy who curates a feed of loops to post I suggested maybe slowing down the rate of posts because it was drowning everything out for me, and he kindly obliged.

Curration and spacing things out a little bit might also be a good solution here :)

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[–] Kichae 9 points 1 day ago (1 children)

There's no lack of dead sports communities around. Turning them into dead sport bot communities doesn't sound like it would help. Sports fans aren't going to show up for that.

Going through the effort of manually posting screenshots in the sports communities would go way farther than getting a bot to cross post.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Going through the effort of manually posting screenshots in the sports communities would go way farther than getting a bot to cross post.

Sorry, this is a bit condescending.

Go take a look at my profile. I have almost 2000 posts already. I've been posting 10-20 posts every day to all the different sport communities. Do you think that dedicating a good half-hour every day to read a bunch of feeds and sharing them is not already enough effort?

I'm not saying that we should rely only on mirror accounts, but I'm saying that it makes no sense to ignore them. I'm not proposing to take just a random army of AI slop and put it here. I'm saying that we can look at the places where the content curation already has been made and replicate it here.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago (5 children)

I have almost 2000 posts already.

FYI, I see indeed 1.43k posts on your https://communick.news/u/rglullis, but https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/u/[email protected] only shows 597. SJW shows 617: https://sh.itjust.works/u/[email protected]

So not sure where you posted the missing ones, but it seems like it was on communities that large instances do not follow.

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

Why is the burden on the other users to block your Twitter bots?

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[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 day ago

As the mod of a couple of sports communities it would be nice to have some more automated content being posted (like game-day match threads, player trades, etc). However, I have yet to receive a response from sportsbots to any of my requests for adding league and team accounts to be mirrored. I don't think I'd want every one of their microblog post to show up in the communities, though.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (3 children)

Sports and bot accounts are 2 things I don't want in Lemmy. More so if the data source is from a Nazi owned platform.

If the bridge happens between Twatter (at some point we should just start calling it swastter) and mstd then use the existing integration with hashtags to bridge the content to Lemmy.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

Why would you "not want sports in Lemmy"? Like, how is a sports community (like those that already exist on here) hurting you?

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[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 day ago (9 children)

How would it work, in terms of number of bots? Would it be one bot per mirrored account?

If they only post to relevant communities (such as [email protected] or [email protected] ), that could help to have more activity.

There would probably need to be some fine-tuning about the number of posts. Some reporters post a lot, that could potentially flood those communities.

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[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 day ago

That sounds handy for Mastodon and annoying for Lemmy.

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