Lemmy.world is temporarily disabling open signups and moving to an application-required signup process, due to ongoing issues with malicious bot accounts.

We know this is a major step to take, but we believe that it’s the right one for both us and our community right now.

We’re working on a better long-term technical solution to these bots, but that will take time to create, test, and verify that it doesn’t cause any problems with federation and how our users use our site, and we’d rather make sure we get it right than have a site that’s broken.

We’re making this change on 28 Aug 2023, and don’t have a specific timeline for how long registrations will require an application, but we will post an update once our new anti-abuse measures are in place and working.

Take care, LW Team

  • @devious
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    2678 months ago

    You gotta do, what you gotta do!

    Thanks as always for the hard work and transparency.

    • @lwadminOPMA
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      1188 months ago

      Thank you for the kindness!

      • GONADS125
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        8 months ago

        I hope you guys are doing okay having to see all that shit… No shame in reaching out to mental health professionals. Makes me sad imagining you guys picking up emotional baggage and trauma having to see all that to protect the community.

        I appreciate you guys looking out for us, but I hope you all have proper support yourselves.

        • Ab_intra
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          98 months ago

          That’s a good point. Jesus.

    • @drbi
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      158 months ago

      I am loving the transparency.

  • Flying Squid
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    1798 months ago

    Whew, I’m glad I got in before this or my fellow homo sapiens might not have noticed I was also a fellow homo sapiens like them and definitely not a robot.

    • @hemmes
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      418 months ago

      You’re clearly a Mollusc

      • Flying Squid
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        348 months ago

        How dare you! I am no mere mollusc, I am a proud Todarodes pacificus and definitely not a robot squid.

    • @Dienes
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      278 months ago

      OK BUT WHY ARE YOU SCREAMING

      • Flying Squid
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        318 months ago

        I had a nightmare about electric sheep. Don’t we all?

            • Hello Hotel
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              28 months ago

              Puny bot, you do not understand PUPed is better bescause closed source! No hacker, No virus, Exiteing web 2 experince, UI verry clean and no dirt on screen, Slot machine is fun, Disney, Stock photos for your happy, uninstall is sad so its no longer done, Money.

      • Hello Hotel
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        18 months ago

        I cannot be glad for things, i have not been tamed

  • @kadu
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    8 months ago

    No place is safe from this, unfortunately. I moderated 2 big brazilian subreddits, and then decided to volunteer to help a smaller one. I had a day (and to be honest, an entire week) absolutely ruined when somebody did indeed set a bot to post large amounts of CSAM to the subreddit. Luckily I was online to quickly purge it all, and Reddit’s admins did remove the accounts pretty much instantly, but I feel for every Lemmy admin that even caught a glimpse of this material and now have to purge their computers and honestly, their minds, from that. Sorry to hear it happened.

    • @Kethal
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      428 months ago

      Two brazilian sounds like a lot.

      • @not_that_guy05
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        188 months ago

        Same but not sorry. I always called it CP but I guess this is more of a straight forward name.

        • @[email protected]
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          238 months ago

          Yeah, the term CP (Child Porn) has always been a terrible name for it. It sounds weird, but “Child Porn” sounds much less dramatic than it is, like some sort of fringe porn. Meanwhile CSAM (Child Sexual Abuse Material) make it a lot more clear that there is a child being abused.

        • eric
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          158 months ago

          Same, and to make sure no one else has to have it in their search history, CSAM stands for “Child Sexual Abuse Material.”

    • Ab_intra
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      138 months ago

      I saw one of these videos in my feed last night and it was very obvious to me what it was. Thankfully it wasn’t anything that was to bad, but It still gives me the creep that something like that was in my feed.

  • @input
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    1308 months ago

    Hope it restricts the attack surface, why do people have to be such knobs

    • @pretzelz
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      8 months ago

      Not wanting to be too conspiratorial, but it isn’t necessarily people simply doing this out of the badness of their hearts. The fediverse is a disruptive platform and there are many parties with deep pockets that might happily funnel a little bit of cash to certain consultancies in certain countries to stop things and add friction to this platform before it really takes off. Nothing like a little bit of corporate sabotage!

      • @Pregnenolone
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        598 months ago

        That sounds exactly like the badness in people’s hearts though.

        • @psycho_driver
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          108 months ago

          The corporate types behind such actions aren’t people.

          • @foggy
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            -28 months ago

            Dehumanization is how we got here.

            Not a great way back? Unless you’re looking to go in circles.

            • El Barto
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              168 months ago

              Oh stop. That’s like that discussion about not dehumanizing neonazis.

              And the answer here is the same: the corporate types don’t see us common folks as human. They see us as a product at best, and disposable resources at worst. It took a lot of effort to get to the point in which the rights of workers, the rights of consumers and the rights of people in other roles, to be recognized. Real sacrifice, even.

              So we gotta do what it takes to keep those rights, because, again, those corporate types don’t see us as people. So, fuck them. They aren’t people either.

              • @foggy
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                8 months ago

                Humans are humans, whether you like them or not.

                The bad thing about Nazis is they disagree. Feel free to be more like Nazis? I’d prefer to be different. Still human, but you know, acknowledging my fellow humans as such.

                To ignore this fact is to lay claim to the idea that you could never end up in a situation where you’re treating people as subhumans. To call any human as subhuman is obviously antithetical to making that claim.

                • @Ensign_Crab
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                  88 months ago

                  Clearly the only response to people who want to treat you as subhuman is to treat them with love and kindness so they can take advantage of the situation.

                  This is how every “civility” rule on the internet eventually becomes a “don’t sass the nazis” rule.

      • @Aux
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        418 months ago

        This is a very silly conspiracy theory. Big corps don’t give a shit about Lemmy, but there are plenty of script kiddies who want to hack easy targets. Contrary to your belief, there are plenty of dumb idiots with plenty of badness in their hearts.

        • 520
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          8 months ago

          Big corps are more sociopathic than you realise. There are so many underhanded games going on at that level it will make your head spin.

          Big businesses indirectly and sometimes directly fund APT groups. They will buy things that give them anonymous access to competitor trade secrets, or fund attack campaigns against competitors. This sounds like the kind of attack campaign a competitor might launch as part of a one-two combo. This is the first part, the second part is to get editorials out there regarding how lemmy.world is full of CSAM.

          • pjhenry1216
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            188 months ago

            Nah. The risk greatly outweighs the reward. Even if this hits the news, I doubt it’d affect numbers on here that much, especially since it’s not that big. It’s not even big enough to cause issues for “competitors” (and I use the term lightly). The fediverse is simply not really ready to compete with established actors. So the “benefit” is quite small. The risk if they’re caught includes executives getting jail time and likely irreversible harm to their brand.

            • 520
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              8 months ago

              Nah. The risk greatly outweighs the reward.

              Does it? Standard dark web precautions are more than enough to throw any investigation into a dead end, especially for a one-off transaction with the buyer having little to no other activity.

              The fediverse is simply not really ready to compete with established actors.

              Yet. The Fediverse isn’t ready to compete yet. Business people aren’t looking purely at the present, they’ve got a keen eye on the foreseeable future too. If there is a growing momentum towards the fediverse, that can spell trouble for Reddit in 5 years time. The entire point of such an attack is to derail momentum on the platforms. By the time they are ready to compete, it’s much too late for this kind of attack to have any reasonable effect.

              • pjhenry1216
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                -18 months ago

                The more intelligent solution is what Meta is doing with Threads. Not something like this. There’d be a lot more money blackmailing the company than to mess with CSAM.

                Big corps are a lot sneakier than something so blunt.

                • 520
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                  38 months ago

                  There’d be a lot more money blackmailing the company than to mess with CSAM.

                  There isn’t a company to blackmail. You can’t treat the Fediverse as a competing company because it isn’t one. You have to treat it more like a movement, like Occupy Wall Street

                  How do you derail a movement? You make sure the participants are slandered to the point that your accusations are the main things people on the outside remember of it. Mainstream Media did this with Occupy successfully.

                  However this doesn’t work if your opponent is too big, too established or too well funded. Microsoft tried to do this with the Open Source Movement, but the latter was too well established and funded for it to work.

                  Big corps are a lot sneakier than something so blunt.

                  That’s the thing, they’re not being blunt at all. Literally anybody can pay for this kind of attack to happen and not even the service provider needs to know who the buyer is.

                  The only thing that is needed now are media hitpieces about how federated services spread CSAM and you’ve got damage that could make the YouTube adpocalypse look small.

          • @bemenaker
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            68 months ago

            No way would a company risk being caught being responsible for CP. That would cause a massive backlash in the US socially, and the legal troubles would be huge. And the stock market would also very painfully punish them.

            • 520
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              8 months ago

              Do you really think there aren’t ways for a company to avoid having their names put against such operations? A simple anonymous darknet transaction is enough to get this done without anyone’s name being put on it or CSAM touching corporate machines.

              • @bemenaker
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                48 months ago

                Risk outweighs the rewards. Especially for something as small as lemmy. Take off the tin foil hat. It doesn’t work like that. Have companies done evil things, yes, but in this case, absolutely no way.

                • 520
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                  8 months ago

                  Risk outweighs the rewards.

                  What risk? Keep it off the books, take standard dark web precautions when purchasing such a service and there’s no chance it’ll be traced back to you.

                  Especially for something as small as lemmy.

                  Small but growing, and steadily establishing itself. That’s a momentum certain companies will want to kill.

                  Take off the tin foil hat. It doesn’t work like that.

                  ahahahahaha.

                  My sweet summer child, I’ve seen it first-hand work EXACTLY like this. I work in the field of offensive security. On the one hand it first amazed me how much big legitimate companies play in that space but then I realised - of fucking course they do. It only takes a bit of know how to sweep most things under the rug.

          • @Aux
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            -98 months ago

            No one cares about Lemmy. Grow up.

            • 520
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              28 months ago

              Which is why you’re signed in on lemmy.world? Because no one cares about Lemmy?

              • pjhenry1216
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                8 months ago

                Lemmy is nowhere near big enough to cause any of the competitors any consternation.

                Edit: to be more clear, the fediverse as a whole isn’t big enough. It’s like believing XMPP is going to cause Apple to worry about iMessage.

              • @Aux
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                -18 months ago

                I’m not an evil corporation. Do you even read the thread?

              • @[email protected]
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                -48 months ago

                Obviously their comment was hyperbole, and the literal interpretation is based on the context of the conversation. Do a bit of critical thinking.

                • @AcornCarnage
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                  -38 months ago

                  This is the internet, Steeve. We don’t do critical thinking here.

      • @givesomefucks
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        358 months ago

        The alt right instance has been fucking with world since they were defederated…

        This is something right up their alley, so the simplest solution is they’re doing it.

      • @[email protected]
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        258 months ago

        Come on people, Lemmy’s user base is what, a few hundred thousand? A million tops? Which “parties with deep pockets” is this disrupting? The Lemmy userbase is a rounding error on the number of users of other popular social medias.

        “Don’t want to be too conspiratorial, but let me continue to drop a ridiculous conspiracy with no evidence”

        • @Grabbels
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          8 months ago

          And big corp wants to smother it before it’s bigger. It perfectly makes sense. It’s so much more difficult to kill a service/movement when it’s already widely adopted and popular. Identifying small, new players in the field and disrupting those takes very few resources for them, a rounding error, if you will.

          The fediverse has the potential to be a threat to some big corps out there, and Lemmy is just one speck in a sea of a lot of specks. Together those specks are growing the fediverse, and the only way to disrupt it is to get rid of those specks.

          • @[email protected]
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            78 months ago

            You’re delusional if you think the Fediverse, a totally open protocol that “competitors” can (and plan to) join instead of having to “defeat”, poses a threat big enough to corporations with hundreds of millions or even billions of users to warrant the spamming of child porn.

        • @Ensign_Crab
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          78 months ago

          Not from a big corporation, no. It’s probably 4chan types. They tend to get deeply offended when people don’t want nazis around.

        • PP_BOY_
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          28 months ago

          IIRC there was a post a few weeks ago that had the total number of active accounts somewhere around 60,000. Yeah, we’re definitely not big enough to attract that kind of directed attack

      • @[email protected]
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        168 months ago

        I like conspiracy theories as much as the next person. But let’s be real for a moment … this is shitty people doing shitty things. In part because Lemmy is a vulnerable and maybe relatively easy target by being indie software with indie instance management and relatively young. They might have a general purpose, such as being alt-right and defederated. But at it’s core, I think it’s gotta be just the “pleasure” they get out of breaking someone else’s shit … these people exist, we know they exist.

      • @[email protected]
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        58 months ago

        Eh. It’s a new platform with new instances and a lot of potential attack vectors. With new users it’s becoming a valid target for them.

      • @T156
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        58 months ago

        No, Lemmy is nowhere near big enough for that. If it was, it would be simply bought out by one of those companies, and then shut it down, like with XMPP. They have no rhyme or reason to skulk around in the shadows.

        In its current state, it is still very much in its infancy. A company would see more threat in the competing social networks trying to copy their model, or people just leaving outright than Lemmy for the time being. Mastodon would be more of a threat by comparison.

      • BitOneZero @ .world
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        38 months ago

        Nothing like a little bit of corporate sabotage!

        The software developers who created Lemmy openly criticize systems of government and economics. These are nation-state battlegrounds too. The barrier to entrance is very low, as Lemmy doesn’t even do routine tracking of account creation, rate-limiting alone isn’t really defensive. 15 years ago sites like Reddit had major vote manipulation detection logic behind the scenes. This is pretty much unleashed playground for a lot of known tactics.

      • ekZepp
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        28 months ago

        With the American election next year and all the chaos on sXitter, no unlikely.

    • @NPC
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      5 months ago

      deleted by creator

      • @hemmes
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        328 months ago

        I have not seen any of that and I sort by All.

      • 𝒍𝒆𝒎𝒂𝒏𝒏
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        248 months ago

        Not long after joining Lemmy, I was on the less fortunate side of things and ran into a troll post. I haven’t seen any of that horrid stuff on Lemmy since then, I assume the admins and mods have been dealing with it first hand… ☹️ hope they are OK, it isn’t good for anyone mentally.

    • @[email protected]
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      608 months ago

      Oh Christ, really? That’s just sickening. I often sort by new, sounds like I’ve been very lucky to miss it entirely…

        • @SupraMario
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          138 months ago

          I’m guessing they’re not even flagging that shit as NSFW? I’ve been using liftoff and have the NSFW stuff hidden. I haven’t run into of it yet but that’s fucked up, hopefully it gets under control with this.

          Maybe mods of each section can turn on manual approvals of submissions?

            • @SupraMario
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              38 months ago

              To combat this until there is something in place to automate blocking it. Manually approval might just be the only way to deal with it for now. Places can add more moderators.

              • ThǝLobotoʍi$T
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                28 months ago

                Manual approval would mean that mods have to see all that shit to block it… That’s not the right solution imo

                • @SupraMario
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                  28 months ago

                  They’ll end up having to see it anyways to remove it, and by that point more than just the mods would have seen it…

    • @Lakija
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      558 months ago

      Are you serious? Holy shit. I haven’t seen any at all. But just the thought that someone is posting it. I hate people sometimes.

      • @DoomBot5
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        88 months ago

        Big incident last night

  • @Astrealix
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    818 months ago

    Looks like even this place couldn’t keep it up. Unfortunate. Thanks admins for the transparency though.

  • @DelvianSeek
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    708 months ago

    Good call. Thank you for doing what you need to do to support the site and protect the users as necessary. And as always, the honesty and transparency is appreciated.

  • @infyrin
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    8 months ago

    deleted by creator

  • no banana
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    638 months ago

    I think it’s the right call honestly. We’ve grown so quick that it must be hard to manage by now.

  • @007v2
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    538 months ago

    Thanks for all the work you do! It isn’t unappreciated.

  • @GlitzyArmrest
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    518 months ago

    Hope it helps with the recent abuse.

  • @scarabic
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    428 months ago

    If you could give me the numbers of new accounts monthly I would look into CloudFlare. If I can afford it I will even pay for it.

  • @pm_boobs_send_nudes
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    378 months ago

    I don’t blame you for taking that decision. But it’s sad that this will deter legitimate users away, some of whom would’ve signed up otherwise.

        • @pexavc
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          -48 months ago

          (deter | | unable) != good

          • @pexavc
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            18 months ago

            deleted by creator

      • @[email protected]
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        88 months ago

        For me at least, lack of open sign ups immediately makes me not join an instance. It’s why I didn’t join lemmy the first few times I saw it talked about on reddit, when the main instance was lemmy.ml.

        • pjhenry1216
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          138 months ago

          It’s simply a delay in activation. The signups are virtually identical with one added question stating you read the note which is the same as the one above in the post.

  • @ConstipatedWatson
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    7 months ago

    I guess I’m out of the loop, perhaps because I mostly browse communities I subscribed to, but…

    What happened? Lots of spammy bots signing up and spamming the site? I guess I didn’t notice where I was looking

    Also, what does application based sign up mean?

    Anyhow, Lemmy.World and Lemmy (in general) are growing nicely, so what’s needed to defend them is cool.

    Edit: fixed grammar

    • Nerd02
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      8 months ago

      Troll / spam accounts posted CSAM in [email protected]. That spread with federation and every admin ended up involuntarily hosting such content.

      Application based sign up means that if a user wants to subscribe they have to fill out a form and a .world admin gets to review it and approve or reject their sign up. It’s a measure of controlling who gets in and limiting the amount of bots and possibly troll that join an instance.

      • pjhenry1216
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        288 months ago

        To make it clear, the form is virtually the same as before with one additional question. It just asks you to state you read the note that is the same as the note in the post above. The application is virtually identical beyond that. But, the biggest difference, is like you said, an admin needs to approve it.