I have been on reddit for just about 12 years now. Something I’ve noticed over time is just how hateful the place has become. A complete outrage machine. Every single sub became filled with it. I’ve filtered so many subreddits over the last few years, it’s insane. I don’t know enough about this place to be sure, but I do hope it doesn’t become the same type of echo chamber of anger.

  • Sarsaparilla
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    41 year ago

    If the owners of your instance (you’re on Lemmy.world) blocks another instance, then you would have to go to the other “instance” (effectively, their actual website) to view the content. You would have to make an account at their instance to interact with the content on their site.

    Alternatively, you could also make an account with a different lemmy instance (or kbin/etc.) that federates with them (but I didn’t wanna complicate the above explanation too much.)

    • lightrush
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      1 year ago

      This is not quite true. All content from that instance that was interacted with, subbed communities, commented or upvoted posts get copied to the local instance. If the local instance defederated the bad instance, the copied content from the bad instance stays and is visible, communities, posts, all of it. It simply is no longer receiving new stuff from the bad instance. Lemmy.world is defederated from Beehaw.org. You can still see Beehaw’s communities from Lemmy.world but they don’t have any updates from Beehaw since the defederation.

      • Paradox
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        11 year ago

        Lemmy instance admins can purge other communities, users, and whatnot. This+defederation will remove them from their instances entirely

    • @brainfreeze
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      11 year ago

      Got it, thanks! I’ve been looking at kbin too and there’s a lot of crossover it seems. Is kbin its own thing or is it another aspect of lemmy (or vice-versa)?

      • Sarsaparilla
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        31 year ago

        Kbin is very early access, but they are just different website software that essentially do the same thing - which is to communicate with other networking instances in “the fediverse” through a shared “protocol” called Activity Pub. The diagram of the tree in the linked wikipedia might help you visualise it.

        Kbin includes a “microblogging” aspect as it is trying to also incorporate Mastodon (decentralised twitter) as well. There’s other software too like Peertube (decentralised Youtube) and Pixelfed (decentralised images) but I dunno how well they all interact with each other yet.