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"Help compare Comment and Annotation services: moderation, spam, notifications, configurability" executablebooks/meta#102 https://github.com/executablebooks/meta/discussions/102 :

> jupyter-comment supports a number of commenting services [...]. In helping users decide which commenting and annotation services to include on their pages and commit to maintaining, could we discuss criteria for assessment and current features of services?

> Possible features for comparison:

> * Content author can delete / hide

> * Content author can report / block

> * Comments / annotations are screened by spam-fighting service

> * Content / author can label as e.g. toxic

> * Content author receives notification of new comments

> * Content author can require approval before user-contributed content is publicly-visible

> * Content author may allow comments for a limited amount of time (probably more relevant to BlogPostings)

> * Content author may simultaneously denounce censorship in all it's forms while allowing previously-published works to languish

#ForScience



FWIW, archiving repo2docker-compatible git repos with a DOI attached to a git tag, is possible with JupyterLite:

> JupyterLite is a JupyterLab distribution that runs entirely in the browser built from the ground-up using JupyterLab components and extensions

With JupyterLite, you can build a static archive of a repo2docker-like environment so that the ScholarlyArticle notebook or computer modern latex css, its SoftwareRelease dependencies, and possibly also the Datasets can be run in a browser tab with WASM. HTML + JS + WASM




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