hawkwind

joined 1 year ago
[–] hawkwind@lemmy.management 13 points 1 year ago

You could report an unmoderated community to an admin. I would imagine most reasonable admin's would give the mod plenty of time to respond. Other than that, just make your community on a different instance and post a link in the dead moderators shell.

[–] hawkwind@lemmy.management 13 points 1 year ago (8 children)

I think you're right. People will gravitate to the most stable large instances because their "All" will be as close to 100% as possible without doing anything special. I wrote a script to seed instances and update subscriptions, but it uses a single account that is subscribed to everything so that other users can see everything. That's not something that would normally happen. Maybe that needs to be part of the base software?

[–] hawkwind@lemmy.management 3 points 1 year ago

Media takes up space. The text from posts and comments is trivial. The database for lemmy.world is only 25 GB. Wikipedia text is only 21 GB.

[–] hawkwind@lemmy.management 21 points 1 year ago (19 children)

That is exactly what that means and it's frustrating to say the least, because it's not clear that's what's happening.

[–] hawkwind@lemmy.management 4 points 1 year ago (5 children)

It works a lot like like email between instances. Let’s call your self hosted instance “A” and the popular remote instance “B.”

User on A searches for “poodles” and finds a community !poodles@B. When they click the search results: A sends B mail saying “send me the last 10 posts for poodles.” B sends A mail with the posts and the user sees the posts, but none have comments.

If nothing else happens then those 10 posts will just hang out doing nothing on A, but if the user clicks subscribe then A sends another mail to B saying “my user wants to follow poodles.” B replies saying “cool, I’ll send you everything from poodles now.” Now, anything a post or comment happens B checks lots list of subscribing instances and sends copies of them.

If user on A comments on !poodles@B or posts, it creates it on A but sends a mail to B saying “here is some new stuff for poodles!”

[–] hawkwind@lemmy.management 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Hopefully, we (the lemmyverse) gets a "meta" feature somehow since there will never be singular communities to point people to.

[–] hawkwind@lemmy.management 30 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (28 children)

When you create that instance, do you immediately need to download and store all the data that has ever been posted to all federated Lemmy instances?

Run my own instance. @Candelestine@lemmy.world is right but there are more details. Federation is not a "sync." When your instance needs to fetch from another instance it will, but it does not get history. You can get a specific comment or post from any time however.

Or perhaps you only need to download and store everything that is posted to the federated Lemmy instances from that point forward?

This is not by default either. Only communities that your users subscribe to will be updated by their "origin" instances.

Or better yet, do you only store what the users on that instance do (i.e. their posts, and posts to the communities hosted on that instance)?

This does happen, but it also stores what your users do on remote instances as well as "copies" of what they interact with. Images (currently the only media hosted by lemmy servers) are linked to thier "origin" as well. So you are storing text of posts and comments.

[–] hawkwind@lemmy.management 10 points 1 year ago

I'm sure there is an instance that has open registration that beehaw is federated with. It's not private information: https://beehaw.org/instances

[–] hawkwind@lemmy.management 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

We should charge for API use now. :)

[–] hawkwind@lemmy.management 14 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Being decentralized will make it harder to just use "search + reddit" because you don't know if it's "search + lemmy.world" or "search + beehaw" or "search + kbin." Also, each admin is in charge of their own Robots.txt.

[–] hawkwind@lemmy.management 1 points 1 year ago

We have to accept there are different levels of moderation. Lemmy allows for quite a few and there are complex interplays between them. Communities are their members, not their moderators.

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