[-] hawkwind@lemmy.management 54 points 1 year ago

We should just use second notation for everything.

I’ll be there in 5 min? I’ll be there in 2 or 3 hundo!

See you tommorow? See you in in 86K!

Next week? About half a Megasec!

Doesn’t Megasecond sound better than Fortnite?

[-] hawkwind@lemmy.management 28 points 1 year ago

NSA Access Only!

[-] hawkwind@lemmy.management 93 points 1 year ago

Buy the dip!!!

[-] hawkwind@lemmy.management 46 points 1 year ago

All the bean memes are in danger! On a serious note, old-skool or not, it's a huge loss of trust in something the community-at-large is excited to see replace reddit.

[-] hawkwind@lemmy.management 32 points 1 year ago

I wouldn't assume reasons why or that it's fixed until that consensus has been more widely reached.

[-] hawkwind@lemmy.management 52 points 1 year ago
  • Should we/let's defederate with X?
[-] hawkwind@lemmy.management 22 points 1 year ago

IMO, likes need to be handled with supreme prejudice by the Lemmy software. A lot of thought needs to go into this. There are so many cases where the software could reject a likely fake like that would have near zero chance of rejecting valid likes. Putting this policing on instance admins is a recipe for failure.

208
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by hawkwind@lemmy.management to c/selfhosted@lemmy.world

v.0.0.6

v0.0.4 - Per requests and concerns: Defaults changed and options added to prevent overloading servers, hitting rate-limiting, filtering to top x communities, etc!

Thanks for your support!

[-] hawkwind@lemmy.management 41 points 1 year ago

I want this to happen, and then all of the admins join together to block API requests from the Reddit instance and redirect to pay-per-use API gateway.

91
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by hawkwind@lemmy.management to c/fediverse@lemmy.world

I made this tool to help self-hosters, new admins, or smaller instances have more global and updated content on their instances.

This is the similar to Lemmy Community Seeder but is designed to be run periodically to capture new communities, and include EVERYTHING by default.

EDIT: As noted in the comments, this is an admin tool. Please do not run it as a user if you don't know what you are doing. If you want a better "All," ask your admin first! That said, lemmony in no way constitutes abuse! You can cause a DOS with curl, but that's not what curl was written for. This tool is to legitimately use an API to enhance our experience. Admins that desire to accommodate high volume on a public service will not know this tool is running against, or on their instances. If it causes performance issues, that is unfortunate. They are free to throttle, ban or block API access to their instance in a multitude of ways.

EDIT 2: Donate to your instance/admin if you like Lemmy!

4
Federation Lag-o-meter (aftershock.lemmy.management)

I made this based on the gripe about some of the silent failures with federation. Might help users choose other servers. Might help admins troubleshoot. Open to comments and criticisms!

[-] hawkwind@lemmy.management 22 points 1 year ago

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 29 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

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 37 points 2 years ago

The thing with piracy these days is there is a huge fear of legal burden AND extreme protectiveness to prevent takedowns. It's the same thing as being a gang member and suspicious of new blood being undercover cops. Once you find actual piracy that works, the last thing you want to do is post publicly about it!

[-] hawkwind@lemmy.management 32 points 2 years ago

Was talking to my non-techie wife yesterday and she asked what I was working on. I said "replacing reddit." I explained the reddit situation and then we talked about alternative social networking and I was shocked she knew what Mastodon was AND said a lot of people were moving there!

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hawkwind

joined 2 years ago