So I try to make heads or tails of this situation. I got randomly banned from a community where I posted a youtube video showing something from a Convention. Then I wanted to post a question today but realised that I couldn’t since I was banned. That community is sadly the biggest of all Star Citizen communities (the next one would be from lemmy.world)
I took a look at the Mod log and see the following line in it:
So no clean up of violating comments or posts, just a strict out ban.
The community has a pretty standard ruleset:
further, the moderator @[email protected] hasn’t posted anything since a year, so what gives here, or was it some other mod that was able to declare the ban?
If you’re in the US and they’re in the US or countries that have copyright treaties you can request removal under DMCA since you own your posts and comment content. And if you don’t agree to their TOS or licensing it’s a kind of a grey area for them. Still not completely foolproof since if Instance admins are willing to go further than you’re willing to go (i.e. not complying without a lawsuit), you can’t really do much about it.
Yeah especially because Rust is much harder to contribute to. Once Sublinks gets off the ground I feel like there will be more people eager and willing to contribute code. I’m hoping that it’s still going since there would be great benefit in this project being an option.
I believe Programming.dev does it too, they call it Pangora though they’re currently restructuring it to be a fork of Sublinks so they haven’t worked on it much at the moment. Also Tesseract is an alternate frontend of the Lemmy software, not a different software. It does improve Lemmy greatly though.
So what will make Sublinks better than e.g. PieFed? Or Mbin for that matter? All 3 of these I thought used Python rather than Rust, as Lemmy does.
I think the main benefit is Lemmy API compatibility and the fact that it’s compatible with Lemmy’s database structure. Meaning that an instance could choose to migrate from Lemmy to Sublinks. When it comes to any other software they can’t really. They’d have to start from scratch as a platform.
Ah, thank you. I’m not 100% certain that’s entirely a positive, but indeed it makes sense why e.g. Tesseract on dubvee.org would want to eye using that, when it comes out.
Whereas Mbin provides more cross-platform compatibility with Mastodon, and PieFed with other similar integrations, e.g. PixelFed and upcoming Loops underneath that.