And if doing "pip install" is too much work, there is a web version of that, ready for your changeset lists:
Of course it's limited, since I don't want to overload mine or API servers.
Kamil Monicz (NorthCrab) recently published his own take on such reverter, but the usage of Google's text processing library leads to weird unreported issues when reverting geometry modifications. So be careful:
After OWL (look it up) died, we were left without map monitoring tools. So I wrote a backend in Perl, learnt OpenLayers and made this website.
WhoDidIt tracks node edits and groups them into small rectangles, so you can see where people changed geometries, and could subscribe to an area.
My instance did non survive the https, but thankfully Simon made a fork. Alas I can't get it to work either:
https://simon04.dev.openstreetmap.org/whodidit/
It's definitely old, OSMCha covers all that better. But it was pretty.
After OWL (look it up) died, we were left without map monitoring tools. So I wrote a backend in Perl, learnt OpenLayers and made this website.
WhoDidIt tracks node edits and groups them into small rectangles, so you can see where people changed geometries, and could subscribe to an area.
My instance did non survive the https, but thankfully Simon made a fork. Alas I can't get it to work either: