With my OCaml Foundation hat on, let me give credit where credit is due: the Foundation wasn't actually involved in creating or maintaining the Discourse forum. It was an initiative of Anil Madhavapeddy, and the list of administrators and moderators is publicly available: https://discuss.ocaml.org/about The fact that Discourse offers hosting for the forum reduces the administration work quite a bit. We may not have this forum at all if we had decided that self-hosting was a requirement. I don't personally have a strong opinion on whether the usage of forums is a good or bad thing, but I can only remark that while some people are more comfortable with the mailing-list (or forced to use them for accessibility reason, which is not the same thing at all), some other people are not comfortable with mailing-lists anymore. Having only a mailing-list would also cut us from a fraction of the community in practice. I think that having both is maybe not ideal, but a good compromise. (At least people don't feel like they have to be on Twitter or Facebook or Discord to be well-integrated in the OCaml community. I was going to joke about TikTok, but actually there is OCaml stuff on TikTok.) If you know people who would be willing to work on improving the accessibility of Discourse, we should think about funding this work. Please get in touch! On Mon, Jan 17, 2022 at 6:36 PM Sam Kuper wrote: > On Mon, Jan 17, 2022 at 09:56:33PM +0700, Daniil Baturin wrote: > > On 1/17/22 21:30, Sam Kuper wrote: > >> # SaaSS VS OTHER NETWORK SERVICES > >> > >> SaaSS implies a failure to do "your own computing on data in your own > >> hands".[1] > >> > >> Insofar as Discourse facilitates exchange of data between people, > >> therefore - e.g. to the extent that it replicates the functionality > >> of traditional mailing list manager (MLM) software - it is *not* > >> SaaSS. > >> > >> However, Discourse, like most forum software, doesn't just replace > >> the MLM. It also replaces the MUA and the features for local > >> data-processing that the MUA provides: a UI for reading posts and > >> composing replies, search/browse functionality, etc. > >> > >> Those (anti-)features, strictly speaking, constitute SaaSS. > >> > >> That might not be bad if, like good MLMs, Discourse instances also > >> provided e.g. Mbox discussion archives for easy downloading and local > >> usage, so that users could easily avoid the SaaSS. But > >> unfortunately, Discourse imposes accessibility and inconvenience > >> barriers against downloading that data for local usage. [..] > >> > >> [1]: > https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/who-does-that-server-really-serve.en.html > > > > Discourse being (or not being) SaaSS and Discourse's email features > > being (or not being) a complete replacement for a mailing list manager > > are separate issues, let's not conflate them. ;) > > Those two issues are related to each other, as explained above. > > > > Discourse could be self-hosted relatively easily, it's just that the > > OCaml Foundation chose not to, because there aren't any real benefits > > in that right now. > > Understood. Still, the hosting arrangements mean that discuss.ocaml.org > tends towards the SaaSS end of the spectrum. The software isn't under > users' control, and it isn't even under the OCaml Foundation's control. > > > > Discourse could also be improved to provide a better email interface. > > It's technically possible to add pure email-based registration and > > enable email interface for all users by default, and it will be > > functionally indistinguishable from a "real" mailing list. > > Yes. That would be great! > > > > If the OCaml Foundation was using using, let's say, Reddit for its > > official forum, that would classic SaaSS at its worst—impossible to > > even migrate the data from and self-host it, and obviously impossible > > for anyone but its operators to improve. > > Yes. Reddit would probably be much worse. > > > > A Discourse-based forum could be made to run in a hybrid mailing > > list/forum mode, the only question is if there's enough momentum to > > make it happen. > > Right. But so far, there has not been - and in the meantime, users with > accessibility barriers to using discuss.ocaml.org miss out. > > > > To me, as much as I hate to say it, any web UI beats a mailing list > > simply because I don't have to wonder if the people I'd have wanted to > > see my message can actually see it, or the Big Email™ companies they > > use using silently discarded it again. > > Users can readily change email provider. But they can't readily > change discuss.ocaml.org. > > So, mailing lists beat a web UI on this front. > > (I'm very grateful the OCaml mailing list exists, or you and I probably > wouldn't even be able to have this conversation.) > > > > It's a sad state of the ecosystem and it's incredibly ironic: email is > > more affected by the SaaSS issues than web-based forums even though > > it's an open protocol stack. > > Sad indeed, as far as it goes, but as I say, users can readily change > email provider - and civilised email providers do still exist. > > > > However, turning Discourse into a full-grown hybrid forum/MLM solution > > is technically and legally possible, so discuss.ocaml.org being a > > hosted instance at the moment is not an unbreakable barrier, as it > > would be if it was a proprietary SaaSS solution. > > Right. But so far, this has not happened - and in the meantime, users > with accessibility barriers to using discuss.ocaml.org miss out. > > Best wishes, > > Sam > > -- > A: When it messes up the order in which people normally read text. > Q: When is top-posting a bad thing? > > () ASCII ribbon campaign. Please avoid HTML emails & proprietary > /\ file formats. (Why? See e.g. https://v.gd/jrmGbS ). Thank you. >