The content of the graffiti/comments isn’t being hosted on the server of the location you’re ending at. You just tie it to the url, same as it worked before. Ignore search strings and tracking tags and that’s it. Nothing has changed on that end.
But if I’m on example.com/feed and I see posts [1,2,3] based on my user and whatever algorithm is there, and you’re on example.com/feed and you see posts [4,5,6], how would it know? Same url, completely different content.
I guess it would work on pages that have a fixed url, like news articles.
You can’t account for viewing the same dynamic content across all pages on the Internet. Nothing is consistent, and stuff changes. I don’t think it really matters though. Commenting on dynamic content is a function of social media or the site itself, not a third party addon. It would still be useful without that
How would it work, technically, on a dynamic website? Any given url may load different content.
The content of the graffiti/comments isn’t being hosted on the server of the location you’re ending at. You just tie it to the url, same as it worked before. Ignore search strings and tracking tags and that’s it. Nothing has changed on that end.
But if I’m on example.com/feed and I see posts [1,2,3] based on my user and whatever algorithm is there, and you’re on example.com/feed and you see posts [4,5,6], how would it know? Same url, completely different content.
I guess it would work on pages that have a fixed url, like news articles.
You can’t account for viewing the same dynamic content across all pages on the Internet. Nothing is consistent, and stuff changes. I don’t think it really matters though. Commenting on dynamic content is a function of social media or the site itself, not a third party addon. It would still be useful without that
Good question, this is not an issue I dont think these days. people can correct like wiki