Yrah, but there's no social aspect to Twitter muting. What you described (as I understood it) is Alice's client influencing which posts Bob sees. In that case, once one person we like violates the protocol, it incentivizes other people in the social group to violate the protocol, quickly rendering it moot.
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Gotcha. The social aspect is secondary and optional.
I was mostly trying to think of a way to deal with my current situation where I don’t appreciate many comments on some of my recent posts, and how to avoid getting annoyed by them. Right now we treat comments as approved by default. But maybe sometimes the opposite is more appropriate, even if it’s just in our own client/view.
Instead of having to whitelist people, you could probably have a simple naive Bayesian classifier in your client that you train on the type of comments you don't like. It would hide future similar comments in the future, with you able to tweak the threshold as your mood changed (e.g., you could risk seeing more junk on a day where you were bored). You could still whitelist your friends so they would pass through the filter.