One thing I am looking towards, and yet to have realised is a stronger indication of context, in the process of writing with strangers.
The current desing supports one style of writing, or at least that practice has emerged partly through the design of the tooling, and partly felt into the practice of the community.
That practice is to write in the hope that others will fork. For that we use the royal we. This style gently enforces writing which is more ammenable to a stranger making it their own.
However, and more recently we have come across another requirement - for an explicit diversity and plurality of voice and perspective. This style requires us to maintain the individuality of each perspective, while making clear the context from which each perspective is written.
In this way we have two kinds of page - the Second Person Page and the First Person Page. Each type of page might needs its own form of privacy and license. I may not wish you to fork my page until it is ready, while I may be happy for you to read it.
# See - Context and Page Context - Citation Bar