Complaints Mount After GitHub Launches New Algorithmic Feed (theregister.com) 22
GitHub has introduced a new feed into the dashboard of users and it doesn't appear to have gone down well with the code shack's regulars. The Register reports: As soon as the new feed arrived, replete with all kinds of exciting suggestions for developers to look at, the complaints began rolling in as users worried the recommendations were turning GitHub into something distressingly like a social media platform. "I do not need to see recommendations, nor activity of people I don't follow," said one user. "Don't fix what's not broken." Others were blunter, stating: "I don't want algorithmic feed" and requesting a feed on stuff that actually mattered â" issues, releases, PRs and so on. GitHub pushed out a new beta version of its Home Feed earlier this week, with the avowed intention of developers reaching a wider audience and building communities. The plan is to make discovery easier and help users "find new repositories or users to follow based on your interests."
As if to demonstrate the levels of discontent around GitHub's new feature, a Chrome extension quickly showed up to disable the social feed by removing the "For You" section on the GitHub dashboard. Not all users were upset by the appearance of the new feed, and GitHub staff popped up to promise that there would be an option to make one's profile private and opt out of pretty much everything via a single setting. It will, however, take until late April before this option is likely to appear, they said. Which prompted the obvious question: "Why is this opt-out instead of opt-in?"
As if to demonstrate the levels of discontent around GitHub's new feature, a Chrome extension quickly showed up to disable the social feed by removing the "For You" section on the GitHub dashboard. Not all users were upset by the appearance of the new feed, and GitHub staff popped up to promise that there would be an option to make one's profile private and opt out of pretty much everything via a single setting. It will, however, take until late April before this option is likely to appear, they said. Which prompted the obvious question: "Why is this opt-out instead of opt-in?"
I do not like algorithmic feeds (Score:1)
I have not seen the implementation GitHub delivers, but I am pretty sure I will have no use for it - no platform has delivered an algorithmic feed I've found anything but annoying, and worse hides real data I wanted to see.
Hope you can turn it off...
Re: I do not like algorithmic feeds (Score:2)
Thereâ(TM)s nothing inherently wrong with a company being large, diverse, flush, and experimental. It (can) provides smart people a stable platform to develop what might progress humanity.
The only real problem is forcing this experimentation on users. Those who want to play with your stuff will opt in, leave the rest of us alone.
But, says the middle manager, think of all that data!
Microsoft owns it, so your options are now theirs. (Score:2)
Best quote (Score:2)
"I do not need to see recommendations, nor activity of people I don't follow," said one user. "Don't fix what's not broken."
https://github.com/github/feed... [github.com]
Re: (Score:2)
LoB
Re: (Score:2)
I don't quite grok what you're getting at.
GitHub Copilot makes sense to me as a Microsoft move.
Introducing a "helpful" (but actually just annoying) assistant, something like Clippy, would make sense to me as a Microsoft move.
To me, messing with feed algorithms is the stuff of Twitter and Facebook.
Developers? Hang out on Github? (Score:2)
Github got infected (Score:2)
They got infected with the Facebook virus.
Soon every site will look and feel like Facebook- every site, everywhere, all moving towards a more perfect state of looking and feeling like Facebook.
Newsfeeds, Like buttons, emojis, polls, pop-up notifications...it's creeping Facebookitis. Like herpes, once it's there, there's no going back.
Everyone everywhere will be absorbed until Facebook becomes everything everywhere, thereby spawning the Singularity.
I can't wait... (Score:2)
... until they start adding in extraneous ads when I pull a project using the command line!
Meh, why sweat over it? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Expectations? (Score:2)
Go back to SourceForge? (Score:2)
The wrong question asked (Score:2)
Happens everywhere and all the time.
Make search better (Score:2)
If they created a better way to search for repos and a better way to search within a repo that would improve it for developers.
For the love of god (Score:1)