I’m a software developer, and I’m currently noodling around with the idea of a small suite of software to help me moderate a couple communities. Right now, the features I’m thinking of are:

  • Lemmy bot integration - the suite would require a bot account.
  • Some kind of content moderation (detecting things like spam, bigotry, etc.) to flag for me to review. Similar to the mod queue on that other site.
  • Automatic removal of certain kinds of content. I figure this would be configurable, like you could choose whether your community is for text posts, for links, for videos, for pics, or some combination of everything.
  • Domain blacklists and whitelists.
  • Moderation record keeping - in other words, a database to keep track of bans, warnings, reports, etc.
  • Canned automatic messages, which would be useful to send when banning, unbanning, responding to certain types of queries, and so on. So if you use the software to ban someone, they automatically receive a notification about what they were banned for, and for how long.
  • Scheduled automatic posts, which would be configured with *.md files for content. Good for things like monthly meta threads.
  • Controls for the bot via JSON objects in private messages, which would direct it to follow commands.
  • Some kind of configurable user commands for the bot. (Haven’t really figured out what this would look like yet.)
  • A simple web interface for all of this.

That’s what I’m considering so far, but I’d love to get more ideas from the broader Lemmy community, and will post it on Github if it comes together.

The technology stack I’m considering is:

  • Node/Typescript
  • The lemmy-bot library
  • Sequelize for the database
  • Nest.js for the web backend
  • [TBD] for the web frontend (I hate React, so not that. Probably either Vue or Angular)
  • Docker for containerization

So what features would other Lemmy mods like to see in a Lemmy moderation suite like this?

Edit: OK, I’ve had a chance to take a look at the code for the existing Lemmy “automoderator” bot that’s in progress, and I think I’m still leaning towards working on one of my own, partly because it looks like there’s a real desire for Lemmy bots that use Node. I think there’s room for two or more in the fediverse. And hopefully, we can all learn from each other. I know I’m bookmarking the Python bot and watching to see how it improves.

Anyway, I’d like to thank everyone for the suggestions! I’m hoping to get started on it this weekend. We’ll see how it goes.

  • BarterClub
    link
    fedilink
    English
    71 year ago

    Ability to message mods. A lot of what automod on Reddit can do.

    • @kescusayOP
      link
      21 year ago

      That’s basically the goal: A better and more configurable automod.