Show HN: Kontxt – Social web layer with CMS and social network (kontxt.io)
1.) The Social Web Layer has rich collaboration features with privacy and share controls: Inline highlights, tags, polls, comments, @mentions, deep-links to anything you add to the page, and navigation between parts. The web layer can be added to any site or PDF with a single line of javascript. This is done with a browser extension, bookmarklet, or added to a page directly by the site owner with the word-press plugin or hard-coded javascript.
2.) The CMS and Social Network lets you organize with folders that have privacy and share controls, a profile with your public highlights, a feed of highlights from people you follow, groups with feeds around topics, and the ability to search your content and what others share publicly.
For years, I had a long commute, so I read online a lot–from HN, of course. There’s too much to read everything, and you only know if an article is “worth-it” after you read it. Then it hit me. Highlights! 1.) On the page with navigation, 2.) visible before you open the link, and 3.) to increase quality and relevance, follow and search highlights by trusted people like friends, co-workers, university peers, and industry leaders.
There’s too much information and not enough time. Highlights are short, useful, and fast to read. Kontxt.io lets you direct attention to what matters. First, it lets you find quality sources from trusted people, then it lets you focus on the important parts of them. Kontxt basically turns the web into an interactive workspace so you can have rich web interactions with other Kontxt users. Or you can extract highlights into a shareable link and post it anywhere on the web–with analytics for what you share. Highlights are automatically saved to the CMS and based on their privacy settings, may be published to feeds in the social network for others to see. Naturally, you may want to discuss the same site with different people for disparate reasons, so you can create multiple highlight layers on a single site, each with Google-Doc-like sharing, privacy, and authorization controls.
It’s now evolved into a general communication and engagement platform for the web. Here’s how Kontxt has been used or where people expressed interest: social news aggregator, productivity, research & planning (generally, and specifically for sales, law, & finance), knowledge-base, training & education, publisher inline-engagement system, etc.
Kontxt gets to the point fast. It brings collaboration directly to the web itself and is already part of your natural workflow since it's always with you every click of the way. The social network is unique since it uses highlights to seed discussions. This has many benefits. Highlights mean people have actually read the article, the source is cited, and parts can’t be misconstrued because you have context. It’s also a human filter of the internet. A site is likely worthwhile if someone took the time to highlight it, and if someone found it useful, then someone “like” them probably will, too. Similarly, if someone’s not willing to highlight a site before they send it to you, it’s probably not worth your time. And highlights will increase how many people actually read what you send them because they’re short, useful, and fast to read.
I’m excited to share this with all of you. Thanks for your time. Please lea...
26 comments
[ 3.4 ms ] story [ 68.3 ms ] threadThis is a problem that every “we made a comments layer for the entire web!” project has faced.
There is an option for publishers / site owners to natively add Kontxt directly to their site with a single line of javascript to give them an initial point of control and moderation (view only, comment, or user added highlights). However, sites can have multiple highlight layers with different privacy controls, so users can switch to another layer for discussion for something like research.
Privacy controlled layers are only accessible to those they're shared with and there's only one public layer per site. Laws will always be followed. And cruel behavior on the web will likely be addressed as it is elsewhere today. It's too early to have developed any firm policies around, but it's definitely important and will be watched and addressed as needed.
We can self police for politeness, and keeping people on topic but the moment people start using a venue to organize harassment, the victim and venue owner ought to be able to rely on a higher party to adjudicate justice.
https://github.com/DanilaFe/matrix-highlight
It that leverages the multiple possibilities of open standards like Matrix to make a really cool to highlight web page contents and fostering discutions, all from any server you want :D
Also another project, cited in the README of matrix-highlight:
https://github.com/opentower/populus-viewer
See the Matrix blogs at https://matrix.org/blog/category/this-week-in-matrix/ to see how these projects have been progressing.
I think there is space for another paid competitor also built on Matrix!
Kontxt is more than just a 3rd party comment system. It's also a CMS that lets people save their findings from across the web. And it's a social network so people can share the best parts of the web with others.
- Teal & pink text look bad on white, it would pop out in dark theme.
- "All Browsers & Devices