1432
Welp that answers a lot of why all .ml are down
(i.imgur.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
I think it can continue even without the source server? Like, once I press the
Reply
button on this comment, it gets saved to my instance (lemmings.world
) then it lets all the other instances know, includinglemmy.world
(where the community is hosted) andslrpnk.net
where you are registered.Now let's say
lemmy.world
stops existing, my instance still would let all the other instances it federates with know, meaning you could read my reply on a community that basically no longer exists. Though I'm pretty sure there are downsides to that (like, what if all the mods were fromlemmy.world
? There's no admin who can add a new mod).At least that's what I think it works like.
oh really? does it actually work this way? if lemmy.world dies, can all its communities continue to live on as long as there are lemmy instances out there federated and subscribed?
No. You would only ever be interacting with a snapshot-at-the-time-of-death of the community on your local instance only. It is the home instance of the community that federates all events, not the instance of the originating post/comment/vote/whathaveyou.
Ah, ok. So if lemmy.world dies, but !somecommunity@lemmy.world was federated to 2 different other instances, those instances wouldn't be able to "talk to each other"? They'd just have snapshots that they could locally interact with, but never see anything else? So is the fate of the Lemmyverse a graveyard of communities from dead instances?
Yep, without the source instance, you can’t communicate with other instances.
Pretty much. I wouldn't pay much attention to that, though - the absolute majority of the internet that has ever existed is a graveyard.