- Joined
- Nov 14, 2012
A lolcow is a person or group whose eccentric or foolish behavior can be "milked" for amusement and laughs.
We have two very fuzzy sections of content on the forum. People who are lolcows, and people who are dramatic. I have been grappling with how to deal with this problem for years now and I'm still not sure how I want to go about it. I've tried a variety of things to segregate information and I'm not happy with any of their results. I'm presenting what I know so maybe other people can think of some ideas.
The problem is that someone like Alison Rapp will display alongside someone who definitely is a lolcow, like DarkSydePhil.
If you visit this website specifically for lolcows, you won't like a lot of the threads you see. If you visit the forum for general Internet drama, censoring or removing threads on people not deemed "lolcow enough" can be alienating. Further, deciding who is and is not a lolcow can play very subjectively. Most people would not call Andrew Dobson a lolcow (anymore), and the interest in Dobson is routinely criticized on all lolcow / drama communities. Despite that I still find Dobson fascinating and am constantly having to purge the thread of shitposting just so I can read it.
The three main tools I have for dealing with threads are:
1. Deletion. Deciding where to draw a line can retain focus and go for quality over quantity, at the risk of pruning too much and alienating people.
2. Subforums. Organizing threads using a subforum defines a specific scope and completely removes it from another forum's view. People who only check Lolcow, for instance, do not see anything in Tumblr. This can create a good sense of categorization and adds room to grow (that is almost always filled by new users joining), but it also segments the community and isn't a very streamlined approach to organization. If a subforum is too niche or weird, like Loveshy is, then it will languish.
3. Tags. Tags allow threads to be categorized within a single board, but (like with Subforums) it's really hard to tell how we can categorize stuff. Dividing content on this forum is a massive headache. I think our current tags are ineffective (because nobody uses them AFAIK).
I want to expand the scope of the site again to adequately allow general Internet drama to be carried out here since there's an increasingly high demand for it. I'm curious to hear how other people think we might be able to facilitate this while still allowing people to find "true blue" lolcows that might interest them.
Discuss.
We have two very fuzzy sections of content on the forum. People who are lolcows, and people who are dramatic. I have been grappling with how to deal with this problem for years now and I'm still not sure how I want to go about it. I've tried a variety of things to segregate information and I'm not happy with any of their results. I'm presenting what I know so maybe other people can think of some ideas.
The problem is that someone like Alison Rapp will display alongside someone who definitely is a lolcow, like DarkSydePhil.
If you visit this website specifically for lolcows, you won't like a lot of the threads you see. If you visit the forum for general Internet drama, censoring or removing threads on people not deemed "lolcow enough" can be alienating. Further, deciding who is and is not a lolcow can play very subjectively. Most people would not call Andrew Dobson a lolcow (anymore), and the interest in Dobson is routinely criticized on all lolcow / drama communities. Despite that I still find Dobson fascinating and am constantly having to purge the thread of shitposting just so I can read it.
The three main tools I have for dealing with threads are:
1. Deletion. Deciding where to draw a line can retain focus and go for quality over quantity, at the risk of pruning too much and alienating people.
2. Subforums. Organizing threads using a subforum defines a specific scope and completely removes it from another forum's view. People who only check Lolcow, for instance, do not see anything in Tumblr. This can create a good sense of categorization and adds room to grow (that is almost always filled by new users joining), but it also segments the community and isn't a very streamlined approach to organization. If a subforum is too niche or weird, like Loveshy is, then it will languish.
3. Tags. Tags allow threads to be categorized within a single board, but (like with Subforums) it's really hard to tell how we can categorize stuff. Dividing content on this forum is a massive headache. I think our current tags are ineffective (because nobody uses them AFAIK).
I want to expand the scope of the site again to adequately allow general Internet drama to be carried out here since there's an increasingly high demand for it. I'm curious to hear how other people think we might be able to facilitate this while still allowing people to find "true blue" lolcows that might interest them.
Discuss.