# I am the Watcher. I am your guide through this vast new twtiverse.
#
# Usage:
# https://watcher.sour.is/api/plain/users View list of users and latest twt date.
# https://watcher.sour.is/api/plain/twt View all twts.
# https://watcher.sour.is/api/plain/mentions?uri=:uri View all mentions for uri.
# https://watcher.sour.is/api/plain/conv/:hash View all twts for a conversation subject.
#
# Options:
# uri Filter to show a specific users twts.
# offset Start index for quey.
# limit Count of items to return (going back in time).
#
# twt range = 1 5
# self = https://watcher.sour.is/conv/ips47sa
@thecanine "it should not be up to the search engines to actively police its results", says who? So, who is it up to? It is not about finding subjectively anything, it is about blatant lies and misinformation. A search engine indexes, and it has to be smart enough to do more. Also, as a company, it should have the human force to take care of issues. It can be done. Fully perfectly? Obviously not.
It seems DuckDuckGo can FuckFuckGo.
@david bring back the good ol' days before search engines. Curated, searchable, and categorised websites.
Bring back dmoz, the directory of internet stuff.
I also miss webrings. That was a great internet discovery tool haha!
@ullarah, for as much memories as it brings, we will not last a day if things were to be back the way they were. CompuServe and AOL keywords, the ever difficult, full of rot dmoz, no thank you. Webrings were/are OK; they are still around.
@david I do agree with you here. For all the evils of Google and Facebook and others. There have been great benefits also.
@david I do agree with you here. For all the evils of Google and Facebook and others. There have been great benefits also.