A few questions:
Part of what makes discord feel like a community is the ability to have conversations. By holding all messages in a moderation queue, you will likely kill interaction between users. Are you sure that’s what you want to do?
Maybe it would make sense to have “open hours” where the chat is monitored and then just limit posting entirely when it’s not?
That being said, MEE6 is one of the most popular moderation bots but I’m not sure it can do what you want.
I found this article which also has some more bot suggestions. https://droplr.com/how-to/productivity-tools/top-5-discord-moderation-bots-to-keep-your-server-safe/
That's okay, I'll try to explain. By their caliber, I really mean from a UX design and innovation standpoint.
SendThisFile and Droplr are both web apps that do what I am trying to. However, Droplr makes it very easy for a new visitor to use the service and STF has a bad user interface. CloudApp and Dropbox are similarly innovative and well-designed applications that I intend to take inspiration from.
I believe in a design process called KISS and my interface is simpler (and I like to believe more attractive) than Droplr. Currently the demographic I'm targeting is people who simply want to email large attachments to others. As a freelancer, I have seen many of my own clients struggle to send me large email attachments - so I've sought to simplify the process a whole lot. It's not meant to be a cloud solution to host files as per CloudApp/Dropbox.
Aside from the interface differentiation, I have monetization routes that I'm looking into. Everything from ads in emails to PRO accounts with monthly subscriptions. In addition to this, I will do my own business development and try to sell a business-branded version of the service.
Luckily there are quite a few other sites who are currently doing what I am, so I can always take ideas from them. Lastly, this is a startup based in India, where there is a pretty ripe angel investing/VC scene, so I intend to use some of my more important connections on that front.
Did not even know about that. Not quite as easy as grabbing a screenshot on Firefox but a good alternative for the Brave browser. Thanks.
I know a few of them do in fact offer file sharing capabilities. In our case, it's via integration with Dropbox.
I think just like how specialized photography website services are typically best at photography websites, specialized file sharing services are best at sharing files.
In case anyone hasn't settled on a solution for sharing files with clients, here are some that I really like:
that's just the built in snippet tool, lets you take a screenshot of a certain area of the screen. The closest thing to it on windows would be http://droplr.com but unfortunately they just went paid only.
If you sign up via a referral link, you can get a 10% discount (and also additional 10% for each referral you bring in). shameless plug of my own referral link: https://droplr.com/join/d/QAQASaaV
I've been using Droplr for my uploads. It works very well and fast. Also they have an amazing desktop app so you can just drag stuff in your account and it automatically copies the link to clipboard. Check it out!
Well, that's the screenshot utility I use which automatically uploads it to my folder (link to program)
And for the linking directly to the post, we all know pictures get more karma than regular links, but alright, I'll keep that in mind.