This is a little like the case of the Haruhi Problem, where a significant advance regarding the number of superpermutations was made by an anonymous poster on 4chan. In that case, the ephemerality of the post was a reasonable concern, and the solution was someone reposted the proof on ArXivOEIS (with “Anonymous 4chan Poster” as the first author), and then cited that.
Here, you have a fixed url, so you could just follow the established conventions for citing webpages. I don’t think you need any special justification for it, nor do you need to treat this as anything other than “merely another online website” (you don’t think it’s “snobbish or discriminatory” to pretend it’s something more because you count yourself among its users?).
This is a little like the case of the Haruhi Problem, where a significant advance regarding the number of superpermutations was made by an anonymous poster on 4chan. In that case, the ephemerality of the post was a reasonable concern, and the solution was someone reposted the proof on
ArXivOEIS (with “Anonymous 4chan Poster” as the first author), and then cited that.Here, you have a fixed url, so you could just follow the established conventions for citing webpages. I don’t think you need any special justification for it, nor do you need to treat this as anything other than “merely another online website” (you don’t think it’s “snobbish or discriminatory” to pretend it’s something more because you count yourself among its users?).
Fair point. I had already provided special justification for it but I agree with your reasoning, so I’ll leave it out. Thanks for the example.