Alright. I’ll check this ASAP.
I’m a male, 23 yo software developer. Admin of lemy.lol instance.
Alright. I’ll check this ASAP.
in 2016, an attempt to overthrow Erdogan and his religious-conservative administration was foiled
It was not a secularist coup. It occurred because of Erdogan’s disagreements with his former Islamist partner, Fethullah Gülen.
You’re right, that’s worse.
Does the receiver instance federate that like object to other instances? If not, it is shit for sure.
About $50 monthly for server, backups, image hosting, mails etc.
I’m using Headscale for work and Tailscale for personal use. I tried to use Nebula but it’s not easy as Tailscale.
You’re right, I was just giving an example though.
I’ve mistyped, I meant message in JSON body :)
This one looks nice. Very detailed.
Looks like they’re recommending object of error code (number) and message.
Yes, almost almost all of us have more than one account, but not everyone uses more than one account at the same time. I think these numbers are correct. There should be a margin of deviation of at most 10%.
More realistic than mainstream social media platforms. On Lemmy, the number of active users is measured by posts, comments and votes.
It’s been over for so long that it’s almost forgotten, huh? Here’s the announcement: https://beehaw.org/post/567170
As I remember, it was about open registration policy and poor moderation.
I thought it was a project like torrents that all instances could use without costs 😐
Wait posts will be manually reposted by real users?
I may be ok with that. I hate non-useful Reddit repost bots and I’m banning/defederating them instance wide.
If things will work manually, I would ask users if they want it. What do you think @[email protected]?
Good to hear you’re ok buddy 🙏
These docs are for latest Lemmy version so you may experience some mismatches with a legacy instance but I didn’t see something like that so far.
TBH I find the docs very easy. It’s about JS documentation familiarity I guess.
You can see the URL and request body from LemmyHttp class method docs: https://join-lemmy.org/api/classes/LemmyHttp.html#getPosts
@[email protected] I have cleaned these and some other bot accounts from my instance. I was ok to open registrations to this point because we were able to get reports for almost every activity and we could easily manage them. But unfortunately Lemmy does not have a regulatory mechanism for votes, so I’ll keep it manual approval until then.
Also it looks like they’re manually creating accounts since we had captcha + email approval in our instance from the beginning. So this means that even with manual approvals, a botnet can be created – just in a delayed manner.