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by yermierc 3847 days ago
It's not that we don't support or respect privacy, but that everything we do is to foster a positive environment of collaboration to minimize content creation redundancy and build morale.

You can choose to remove yourself from that community ecosystem, but it's not exactly our ethos or why we started on this endeavor.

1 comments

You're attempting to own the user's learning experience. Rather than attempting to build something which puts the user first, your product puts you, the owners, first. And when you say words that don't mean anything like, "it's not that we don't support or respect privacy" when you just made it very clear that you do not, it just insults the people who were listening and trying to give you the benefit of the doubt in the first place. You should have just owned up to the fact that you do not believe in user privacy rather than try to patronize those who are taking the time to read your posts.
> Rather than attempting to build something which puts the user first, your product puts you, the owners, first.

Actually, it sounds like he is trying to put the community and the product first.

A collaborative learning system works so much better with forced sharing.

The hardest and most time consuming part of using standard SRS software is building your deck.

A collaborative system helps share this load across all users.

If you want privacy choose a different product. For example I don't use GitHub for my projects because I don't want to share them.

>The hardest and most time consuming part of using standard SRS software is building your deck.

This is because that's the initial learning phase. You can't just download a spaced repetition deck and run it though any program and learn it in any meaningful sense. The cards I need to create to learn a concept will be totally different than the cards you create and so on.

Connecting your cards to the relevant nodes in your personal semantic network isn't just the most effective way to learn, it's the only way human brains encode information. If you're not doing this purposefully, you're just trying to glue someone else's relevant retrieval cues into your own semantic network.

There are other ways the comment parent's site could avoid this, but inevitably in my experience this leads to FALSE learning, where you have very sparse retrieval cues, basically limited to what you see on the screen in the learning app. This gives you a feeling of progress, because you really can recall the information in the app, but very little practical use.

> This is because that's the initial learning phase.

> The cards I need to create to learn a concept will be totally different than the cards you create and so on.

I don't use SRS software to learn a concept. I use it to remember concepts I already know. As such creating the cards is just tedium.

For example, I used to do a lot of 3-6 month contracts, and one contract might be all backend Java, and then the next might be all Javascript, and then the third might be in Rails + Javascript.

SRS software allowed me to stay "fresh", at an advanced level, on around 6-8 languages and platforms despite not using them for long periods of time.

Ugh. s/learn/remember/ for your use case then. The cards you need to remember a concept will be totally different than the cards I need to remember a concept and so on. Creating the cards isn't "tedium", it's reinforcing the concepts you decide you need to be reinforced while presumably not things that you definitely know and will never forget because you initially overlearned (this is a technical term) them.
> Ugh. s/learn/remember/ for your use case then.

Learning and remembering are very different processes.

I've had great success sharing cards and decks and haven't found my own cards any more valuable than the cards I've gotten from friends.