Skavau, skavau@piefed.social
Instance: piefed.social
(Admin)
Joined: a year ago
Posts: 394
Comments: 654
Piefed.social Staff
Community owner of !television@piefed.social and !obscuremusic@piefed.social
Posts and Comments by Skavau, skavau@piefed.social
Comments by Skavau, skavau@piefed.social
I don’t really see how to ‘fix’ the first part because its fundamental to what the threadiverse is
There’s one major oversight here that needs to be addressed if Lemmy/Piefed were to suddenly gain a glut of new users. How bans work.
Currently, instance bans and community bans are treated as two separate things. When a user is banned from an instance, you’ll often see in the logs a bunch of community bans alongside it at once. These are communities that user has posted on. An instance ban automatically applies hard-bans to communities they have interacted in from that instance. But the problem here is its only communities they’ve interacted in.
The instance ban itself is simply a rejection of federation. It doesn’t block users from posting in communities on that instance - only the community bans do that. It just means their posts won’t federate out. This means that an instance banned user can continue to be a nuisance in most communities (or all, if they are pre-emptively banned) on an instance locally - and the moderators of that community and instance won’t even know. With larger numbers of users would also mean larger amounts of trolls and incompatible users, which could greatly increase the chance of people simply vandalising communities and no-one even noticing.
Digg already came and went again
May I ask what your prior instances were?
How will it die?
No. Piefed and Mbin are separate software that reads Lemmy instances, but are not Lemmy instances.
Go to piefed.social and you’ll see or fedia.io for mbin.
Tbf piefed.zip doesn’t have much of a local so that makes sense for you, but the user above is on feddit.org, which is a long-running German-language (at least prominent) instance so it does make sense for them in that context if they’re German.
I didn’t watch so maybe you did namedrop, but it’s not just Lemmy anymore - it’s Piefed and Mbin too! (I saw you had a “Lemmy” category)
Not specifically age-verification, but they are considering checks of some sort at some point to deal with the bot problem on there. That’s at least one angle. They’ve also just rolled it out in small scale to suspicious accounts. So whether or not it is done for the purposes of verifying age, or just dealing with bots - I suspect it’ll arrive in the end once they feel they have the capital to do it.
As for the UK specific issues, it’s hard to get a concrete numbers because most people in the UK just switched to a VPN. In the event of Reddit implementing global ID-check measures, it wouldn’t matter what VPN you switched to - so the situation would be a bit different.
I will note that piefed.social, the instance you signed up to does not tend to federate with NSFW communities (so many communities on fedinsfw.app are not accessible from here), however if your interest is erotic fiction specifically then it’s probably okay.
Lemmy.ml isn’t widely defederated to my knowledge.
Yes, it’s just cut off under the top 20.
You can make a community here in that scenario. But in order to moderate that community on lemmy you would have to ask the admins of the particular instance that its based on to appoint you a moderator there under a locally made profile.
Note that piefed.social has a delay for new accounts to make communities though. Just one day.
https://piefed.social/communities
For context, it’s through here. “Create local community”. Oddly enough it’s actually not on the frontpage in anyway - maybe we should change that.
It’s not hard, and you have to wait for a day on piefed.social - this is purely for anti-spam measures.
Basically a post about proposing an anthology series for all cancelled shows where each episode is a wrap-up of how it would’ve ended.
At some point we talked about not having bots count to overall subscriber count, but I don’t know if its implemented yet.
I feel like your comment of (2) contradicts (3) to some degree. I agree the wider culture of lemmy is progressive/left, but that at least indirectly contradicts the prominence of racist content that you claim exists.
I don’t really see how to ‘fix’ the first part because its fundamental to what the threadiverse is
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There’s one major oversight here that needs to be addressed if Lemmy/Piefed were to suddenly gain a glut of new users. How bans work.
Currently, instance bans and community bans are treated as two separate things. When a user is banned from an instance, you’ll often see in the logs a bunch of community bans alongside it at once. These are communities that user has posted on. An instance ban automatically applies hard-bans to communities they have interacted in from that instance. But the problem here is its only communities they’ve interacted in.
The instance ban itself is simply a rejection of federation. It doesn’t block users from posting in communities on that instance - only the community bans do that. It just means their posts won’t federate out. This means that an instance banned user can continue to be a nuisance in most communities (or all, if they are pre-emptively banned) on an instance locally - and the moderators of that community and instance won’t even know. With larger numbers of users would also mean larger amounts of trolls and incompatible users, which could greatly increase the chance of people simply vandalising communities and no-one even noticing.
Russell T Davies reveals why he sees Doctor Who as a "gay show" and addresses online negativity (radiotimes.com)
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Digg already came and went again
May I ask what your prior instances were?
How will it die?
No. Piefed and Mbin are separate software that reads Lemmy instances, but are not Lemmy instances.
Go to piefed.social and you’ll see or fedia.io for mbin.
Tbf piefed.zip doesn’t have much of a local so that makes sense for you, but the user above is on feddit.org, which is a long-running German-language (at least prominent) instance so it does make sense for them in that context if they’re German.
I didn’t watch so maybe you did namedrop, but it’s not just Lemmy anymore - it’s Piefed and Mbin too! (I saw you had a “Lemmy” category)
Not specifically age-verification, but they are considering checks of some sort at some point to deal with the bot problem on there. That’s at least one angle. They’ve also just rolled it out in small scale to suspicious accounts. So whether or not it is done for the purposes of verifying age, or just dealing with bots - I suspect it’ll arrive in the end once they feel they have the capital to do it.
As for the UK specific issues, it’s hard to get a concrete numbers because most people in the UK just switched to a VPN. In the event of Reddit implementing global ID-check measures, it wouldn’t matter what VPN you switched to - so the situation would be a bit different.
I will note that piefed.social, the instance you signed up to does not tend to federate with NSFW communities (so many communities on fedinsfw.app are not accessible from here), however if your interest is erotic fiction specifically then it’s probably okay.
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