I thought I understood, but I still have Beehaw content in my feed, so I guess I don’t understand after all… Can someone dumb it down for me?

  • @Nobody
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    5211 months ago

    We need a c/FederatedDrama write up.

  • @hydra
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    2711 months ago

    wait why did they defederate us?

    • @dan1101
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      11 months ago

      lemmy.world and and sh.itjust.works have a lot of users and it seems like beehaw was getting too much content from them. There are apparently only 4 people running beehaw and they felt they couldn’t moderate all the content and felt like it was a vulnerability that lemmy.world and sh.itjust.works just let anyone sign up.

  • @sebovzeoueb
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    2211 months ago

    participate the effort to create an alternative to Reddit people leave Reddit to join the alternative be unable to handle the influx of people trying to use the alternative to a website with millions of users

    • Andreas
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      5411 months ago

      Their reasons are much more selfish than that. They insist on only having 4 moderators while never scaling up, and they don’t like how federation allows users from other instances to post on their instance because it disrupts their rigid ideal community vibe. According to their suggestions on “improving moderation tooling”, the ideal federation setup is that their users can post on other instances, but other instances’ users can’t post on theirs, so they can save time on moderation work. The moderation work of other instance admins for their users doesn’t matter, clearly.

      • @[email protected]
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        3311 months ago

        Every interaction I’ve had with Beehaw so far has reminded me of overlord Reddit mods that think they are god.

      • DiachronicShear
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        2011 months ago

        Isn’t this like… the whole point of the Federated Universe? The mods do Beehaw want their server to be a “safe space”. They’re perfectly within their rights to restrict who can post in their own community. But you, the user, are not in any way beholden to their whims, and can make an account on any other Lemmy instance, or create your own and make it as restricted or unrestricted as you please.

        It seems logical to me that the creators of a safe space for marginalized communities would restrict their community from the internet at large because people on the Internet feel emboldened by anonymity to attack others.

        • Andreas
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          1711 months ago

          Yes, the point of the Fediverse is that everyone is free to associate with groups they choose. There is nothing wrong with creating instances that are very isolated. What Beehaw wants with the “improving moderation tooling”, however, is a safe space where the network is restricted from them, but they still have full access to the rest of the network. That suggestion is what I was calling selfish, because this way their users would be parasiting off the content and moderation of other instances while giving nothing back.

          • QHC
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            711 months ago

            I still don’t see how this is not in line with the ideals and values of the Fediverse. If other instances don’t want to take on the extra moderation you are referring to, they can simplify defederate from Beehaw, too.

            Every instance can do whatever it wants, and if other instances don’t like that then they can both go their own ways.

            • @Darorad
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              111 months ago

              I don’t like the idea of one way defederation, that seems like it would open the door for larger instances to try to shut down smaller ones.

          • @ActuallyASeal
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            611 months ago

            I wouldn’t call it selfish. They want tools for more granular control on their instance. That’s perfectly fine. If they limit who can post or comment based on the instance they are from. The other instances are perfectly free to limit their users as well in response or for their own arbitrary reasons.

            There seems to be a distinct lack of controls across lemmy as a whole. The only option for them is all or nothing at the moment.

            I think the big take away is for users to think about what instance they create their accounts and communities on.

            • @ultimate_question
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              611 months ago

              Ya I think a big part of the pushback is that I think a lot of people chose their “home” instance based on the guidance provided by the instance admins and then lost access to a lot of the network because of other decisions made by those same admins

        • grus
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          611 months ago

          Thank you, you put in words my thoughts exactly. Not all communities need to have the same rules as the others, not all need to be as open as others and that is more than fine.
          Homogenization of the internet led us to a handful of corporations dominating social media websites and that is awful.

        • Fatalchemist
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          211 months ago

          Exactly. Instead of being a reddit user and admins ban a bunch of subs that can no longer be accessed at all, you can still access those instances with another account.

          Reddit can in the future ban NSFW content and there is nothing you can do to view those subreddits ever again.

          Not the case here.

      • Morgikan
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        1911 months ago

        I read their post explaining the decision, but it seems like it is at odds with itself. If your goal is to create a safe space, why are you using a federated service? I understand you have the option to defederate, but at that point why didn’t you just setup a standalone message board. It just feels that their use case doesn’t fit the system.

      • @Knoll0114
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        1011 months ago

        The community vibe is definitely a huge motivation. They want to be able to control the sort of people on their instance which they can’t do if the mass user bases from lemmy.world etc. that are (relatively) neutral have access. It’s a shame because they had some good communities established.

        • Dick JusticeOP
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          11 months ago

          Yeah, I don’t believe for one second that those 4 admins have actually, meaningfully, personally vetted 11,000+ users. People have posted (sorry, I dont have the link) here that they just filled the “application” out with nonsense and still got approved.

          • @Knoll0114
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            311 months ago

            Doesn’t surprise me too much tbh. I don’t think I’d make an account with Beehaw but I might end up making one with a small instance they federate with to have access. While they have a right to defederate it’s not something I like seeing.

          • Goronmon
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            111 months ago

            Yeah, I don’t believe for one second that those 4 admins have actually, meaningfully, personally vetted 11,000+ users.

            So, if they are struggling the moderate a community with 11,000+ users, it would make sense for them to limit an even large number of external users for the time being until they feel they have things better in control, correct?

            • Dick JusticeOP
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              311 months ago

              That’s not what I’m commenting on, but yeah, naturally. It’s their instance, they can do what they want.

      • @[email protected]
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        711 months ago

        According to their suggestions on “improving moderation tooling”, the ideal federation setup is that their users can post on other instances, but other instances’ users can’t post on theirs, so they can save time on moderation work.

        So basically they want to have their cake and eat it too. How lovely.

      • Joe B
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        11 months ago

        @Andreas @sebovzeoueb They new going into this that they would be federated. They waited to get enough people then do stuff like this. People will leave then as there content will get old fast. They will realize like reddit that people want to be able to search and find new content

      • putr
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        511 months ago

        Is that right? That seems not in keeping with the spirit of the thing. If they don’t want to moderate large communities, how about you don’t host large communities at all. Maybe that’s what they’re after, but they had seeded the space with a lot of logical communities that people were going to click on from the “find federated communities” pages from around the fverse.

        • Dick JusticeOP
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          It seems like they really just want the well made, actively developed message boards software, but they dont truly want the federation stuff. They wanted (and got) the user boost from all the reddit nonsense (and no, I do not believe that four people personally, meaningfully vetted thousands of users in the course of a couple days) and now they want to wall themselves off.

      • Ghil
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        411 months ago

        They have 30 something mods, they are 4 admins.
        It’s not about being selfish, it’s about creating a space that they think can be a safe space. That’s what’s cool about federation, you just use other instances and that’s it.

      • FaceDeer
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        211 months ago

        It seems to me that beehaw could already accomplish something along these lines with an “automod” equivalent that just insta-rejects any outsider posts on their hosted communities. So having that built into the protocol as a flag of some sort may actually be a good idea, because then other instances would be able to more easily see that behaviour and choose to not federate with them in return. If I was running a Lemmy or Kbin instance I wouldn’t want to bother my users with communities that they could see but not interact with.

    • @[email protected]
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      511 months ago

      The only simple way I know about is checking the instance status of each individual server. Beyond that it’s building apps to collect the info for you.

      At the bottom of every page of a Lemmy instance you’ll find the “Instances” link, which takes you to a list of who are connected and blocked.

  • z500
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    11 months ago

    Lemmy.world still has all the content it pulled from beehaw before they defederated, but they won’t sync anymore, so you won’t see new beehaw updates, and they won’t see any updates from lemmy.world

        • VitaMan
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          411 months ago

          This link doesn’t work anymore

          • @s38b35M5
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            11 months ago

            deleted by creator

      • z500
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        2411 months ago

        Apparently the 4 admins are having trouble dealing with the influx of new users, so they defederated from lemmy.world and sh.itjust.works because their open registration policies are giving them the most problems.

        https://beehaw.org/post/567170

        • @[email protected]
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          911 months ago

          Ok I’m one of the new users and it looks like I’ve commented on communities hosted there maybe a half dozen times. I guess I’m part of the problem 😔

          But I’m a little unclear about the role an admin plays on an instance? Are they actually taking on mod responsibilities, in which case I can certainly understand how 4 would be totally swamped?

          I guess in my head I sort of imagined each community has its own mod(s) and the admins would only step in as a kind of “supreme court” if some dispute gets out of hand? I’ve probably got this totally wrong.

          • z500
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            1111 months ago

            Yeah that’s what I was wondering. I’m just going off what they said. I know they don’t allow communities to be created except what they did themselves, so maybe they are taking on all the mod responsibilities?

          • @[email protected]
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            11 months ago

            Yes but this is a nonstandard approach. For most instances it works as you had originally described.

        • @eight_byte
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          5 months ago

          deleted by creator

        • @Butane
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          -711 months ago

          Maybe we need to write them an apology letter in their sign-up to rejoin.

              • Alice
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                -2111 months ago

                I’m not kissing your, or anyone else’s ass. The fact that a lot of you Embrace and encourage other people to determine how other people should behave, is a jackass entitled way of thinking.

                • Joe
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                  911 months ago

                  Bro they literally just want people to be nice, how on earth is that concept making you so angry?

                • Hermitix
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                  711 months ago

                  Yeah, how dare people use a voluntary system of association to avoid dealing with assholes like you.

            • @sixdix
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              -1311 months ago

              Removed by mod

              • Alice
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                -1311 months ago

                🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 better watch out, being sassy will get you a spanking.

                How dare you not consider the feelings of the billions of people on planet Earth that use the internet. Absolutely preposterous

  • @AWanderingSorcerer
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    1611 months ago

    From what I understand, if you, using a lemmy.world account, post something on a beehaw instance, only people from lemmy.world would be able to see it.

  • savoy
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    11 months ago

    So when an instance is blocked, it means users on the blocked instance will no longer be able to see that instance’s content. For example, beehaw.org has now blocked lemmy.world. However with the way federation works, the content from beehaw is cached on lemmy.world servers. So you can only see what has already been cached; there will be no updated content on any existing cache.

    Edit: here’s a recent post from kbin.social going into further detail on how federation works.

    • @sixdix
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      11 months ago

      Wrong.

      beehaw blocked lemmy.world. lemmy.world has not blocked beehaw. lemmy.world will continue to get content from beehaw. beehaw has stopped all content from lemmy.world from comming to beehaw.

      lemmy.world accounts can still see new post and comments from beehaw but no comments will be responded to by behaw users because they cannot see lemmy.world post or ocmments.

      nvm looks like their content did stop coming through.

        • @sixdix
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          311 months ago

          I’ve already updated my comment and crossed it out.

      • @positiveWHAT
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        511 months ago

        We don’t get posts from their instance, only those that are posted by lemmy.world users, and those posts are also exclusivly ours.

        • @sixdix
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          311 months ago

          Hmm, maybe your right. I’ll add a edit.

  • @Jessica
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    1411 months ago

    So I guess the next question is do we now recreate beehaw communities that were popular and fragment the community, or do we make accounts on a smaller instance that has access to beehaw.org and lemmy.world? I’m not about to start logging in and out of multiple accounts because beehaw mods are getting butt hurt…

    • @[email protected]
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      311 months ago

      I think we should definitely be working on new communities. Beehaw certainly has a place in the fediverse but it’s not as the instance with the largest communities. It’s simply incompatible with their moderation policies.

  • fyndr
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    1111 months ago

    Man, This is so cool, Not related to the topic but im able to see yall talk about lemmy from lemmy instances while im on kbin

    • Rvd2k4
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      311 months ago

      In my Info Sci classes we talked about federated search and how it could work. Unfortunately, very few instances existed at the time…. in 2010.

    • grus
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      211 months ago

      fr, fr. Every time I see an entire different instance I can’t help but go “Awww, look at them have their own lil discussion/drama over there, how cute” and the fact that I can also interact with them makes it even more adorable.

    • Dav
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      111 months ago

      Correct me if I’m wrong but pretty sure we can see them on kbin but they can’t see us on Lemmy yet. Boss man Ernest is working on it.

  • duraks
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    1111 months ago

    On reddit you could get banned from many subs for posting in a sub that its moderators didn’t like. And in the fediverse it’s exactly the same. So what’s the point? I’m here, because I hoped that it won’t be like reddit.

    • parrot-party
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      811 months ago

      That’s just the nature of any site that allows community moderation. If you’re looking for something different, try fark.com

      • @NanPakoka
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        211 months ago

        That’s a name I haven’t heard in many years

    • @nivenkos
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      611 months ago

      Just post quality content here and hope the communities move here.

      Let the powermod wannabes have their own little barren exclave on Beehaw.

    • QuestioningEspecialy
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      211 months ago

      In defense of preemptive bans, some subs do it when you participate in documented hate-subs. Didn’t know the practice existed until I got a bunch of automessages. lul

    • @[email protected]
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      111 months ago

      On reddit you could get banned from many subs for posting in a sub that its moderators didn’t like. And in the fediverse it’s exactly the same. So what’s the point? I’m here, because I hoped that it won’t be like reddit.

      That’s not what caused the migration of the past two weeks. What you described was a thing all the time, yet something different and special seemed to have happened, which caused me, you and many others to move right now.

      That special event was a small group of people deciding for the whole platform. This cannot happen here. Instance admins can decide for their own instance, and that’s it. The other instances can make other decisions and no lemmy has to change platform (but maybe instance).

  • Kichae
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    811 months ago

    You have Beehaw content that was synced before they defederated.

    Federation isn’t accessing remote content on remote instances, it’s content mirroring. So, anything that was mirrored before Beehaw defederated will stay exactly where it is. You just won’t see any updates to it.

    At least, not from Beehaw.

      • @Darorad
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        411 months ago

        Basically we can post new content, but only people on lemmy.world can see it. It doesn’t get sent to any other instance. Any old posts will still be there but any new interactions will not get sent outside of lemmy.world.

  • @[email protected]
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    611 months ago

    So for those who know this better, should Lemmy Kbin users look for alternative to these communities (games/gaming for me)

    • Kichae
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      711 months ago

      You should be looking at multiple communities on the same topic just as a matter of course. Single mega-communities really aught to be discouraged, since they actually crush meaningful engagement (most posts don’t ever get seen, most comments don’t ever get seen, etc.)

      If you follow multiple communities on the same topic, you can get the same kind of constant content stream – if that’s what you’re concerned about – while also actually having your contributions noticed.

      Plus, not having single points of failure is the lesson everyone should be taking away from Twitter and Reddit.

    • AshDene
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      311 months ago

      I don’t believe any kbin instances have been de-federated by beehaw…

      • tjhart85
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        211 months ago

        Yeah, but if people were intentionally being trolls, it stands to reason that they’ll hop on the next available open registration site and begin their shenanigans there, getting us banned too.

        From what I’ve seen, for the most part the KBin magazines have been great, but we’ve definitely got a few people that I’ve seen that might intentionally start harassing trans people for instance and if they make lives difficult for the beehaw mods, we might get banned too just by association.

        • AshDene
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          11 months ago

          Open signups aren’t novel on the fediverse, lots of places have them. The problem is having them without following up and banning problematic users… but yes I expect that if stricter instance-wide moderation doesn’t happen this instance will end up being defederated by most of the fediverse (with mastodon at least that seems to be the norm).

          I’m hoping moderation has been been lacking because Ernest is just overwhelmed with the amount of load, and that it is fixed soon, if not I’ll end up moving on once admins start defederating it (probably to another kbin instance).

    • CMLVI
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      111 months ago

      Not necessarily. From what I understand, it’s about lemmy/kbin not vetting users. Because they were a a more heavily moderated community (by design) it’s harder for them to keep that standard with other federated instances. Instead of trying to combat the population increase platforms have received, they defederated while the “riff raff” gets sorted out. If they are willing to re-federate in the future, I’m sure they’ll be back. It’s just the influx of users makes it harder for their small team to moderate content.

      This is how federation works, though. It’s by design. If you are wanting to see that content, you are able to move to a different instance (or even beehaw, if they are still taking applications), or to one that is still federated with them.

      • UnderNull
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        911 months ago

        Yeah, I don’t really see this as a drama.

        Beehaw and lemmy.world have different goals. Beehaw said that this isn’t a permanent ruling nor a judgement on said communities - merely a practicality to meet their goals. Lemmy’s moderation tools and the moderation staffs are just unable to keep up with the rate of new users currently.

        The decision will be revisited in the future, when both of these things have time to catch up. It sucks, but neither side is wrong here.

        • CMLVI
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          311 months ago

          I’m getting a little bit mixed signals, as it seems beehaw mods are little quick to moderate users, which to be fair, you specifically signed up for. Beehaw can moderate how they want. I think it’s just partly because so many came at once, people filtered to what was available regardless of if they agreed with the platform rules heavily or not. You just went where you went to get in. It’ll get sorted eventually

        • CMLVI
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          111 months ago

          AFAIK it is only lemmy.world and SJW, but I mentioned kbin because it was another instance that was receiving a lot of new users along with those other platforms.

  • aiwentari
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    511 months ago

    Suppose there was a comment thread containing a back-and-forth conversation between a kbin.social user and a lemmy.world user. What would a user on beehaw.org see, given that they are federated with one but not the other?

    • QHC
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      211 months ago

      Users on Beehaw would not see anything from Lemmy.world. If it’s still federated with Kbin, then they would see that content.

      Likewise, anyone on Lemmy.world would not see content or be able to access communities from Beehaw.

      • aiwentari
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        311 months ago

        So for a Beehaw user, would they see all of the the Kbinner’s comments and it would look as if they were talking to themselves? Or would they only see the top level Kbinner comment and nothing else (due to their instance not seeing the Beehaw comment and therefore not seeing children of that comment either)?

        • QHC
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          211 months ago

          Beehaw can pull in content from other instances, but users from those instances cannot comment or post back to Beehaw. If you were interacting with content coming from Beehaw on a different instance, in practice it would feel like you’re shadow-banned as nobody on Beehaw would be able to see or reply to you.

          • DarkwingDuck
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            11 months ago

            So given participant 1, 2. 1 is on .world, 2 is on kbin

            P1: message a
            P2: message b
            P1: message c
            P2: message d

            Would a beehaw user see just messages b and d? What would it look like they are replying to?

            Would they see the comment chain at all as it was started by P1?

            • @Darorad
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              211 months ago

              There’s two different scenarios, a community not hosted on beehaw:

              they wouldn’t see the chain at all.

              On a community hosted on beehaw:

              Message a would only exist on world’s local copy of the thread, nobody not on world can see it. (This local copy is also not getting updated by anyone not on world.)

              Basically, the true thread exists on the instance that hosts the community. Defederation cuts off communication with one server. If it’s the server that hosts it, it’s a lot more severe.

    • @[email protected]
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      211 months ago

      AFAIK, it depends on where this community originated in which this conversation happens.

      • If it’s a beehaw community: lemmy.world users can only talk to other lemmy.world users
      • If it’s a lemmy.world community: beehaw users can only talk to other beehaw users
      • If it is hosted anywhere else: I give up, I cannot make sense of it.

      Please notify me if someone knows the answer. I tried to understand it using this great explanation with examples.

      I also wonder what would technically happen if beehaw users could not see comments from defederated instances in other instances. How would they see a back and forth? Would they see the same level of indentation? Would they see other users from federated instances replying to comments which do not exist?