

That’s perfect, exactly what I meant to say.
I’m a #SoftwareDeveloper from #Switzerland. My languages are #Java, #CSharp, #Javascript, German, English, and #SwissGerman. I’m in the process of #LearningJapanese.
I like to make custom #UserScripts and #UserStyles to personalize my experience on the web. In terms of #Gaming, currently I’m mainly interested in #VintageStory and #HonkaiStarRail. I’m a big fan of #Modding.
I also watch #Anime and read #Manga.
#fedi22 (for fediverse.info)
That’s perfect, exactly what I meant to say.
Mer chönd das scho probiere, aber denn müsst mer ja di ganz Ziit en Übersetzer zur Hand ha, wär denn doch nöd die best UX würdi säge. Das würd d’Neuakömmlige nur no meh verschüüche.
Sounds like a torrent
Because it is torrenting. I clicked on the “More information” link in the popup and:
PeerTube uses the BitTorrent protocol to share bandwidth between users by default to help lower the load on the server. The main threat to your privacy induced by BitTorrent lies in your IP address being stored in the instance’s BitTorrent tracker as long as you download or watch the video.
No idea about copyright though, but I also don’t quite understand the issue there that doesn’t apply to ActivityPub itself too.
Well, it’s different meanings of “posting to your profile”. I get it you’re using the technical/backend/AP meaning of the post being posted to the user’s account and then the community just announces it iirc. At least that’s how it works on Lemmy, never looked into how Mbin does this exactly, iirc there’s differences to how Lemmy and Mbin communities look from Mastodon.
But in this thread’s context, it means that you make a post, and it’s only visible on your profile, nowhere else. Not in any magazine. New Reddit has this feature, where you can choose to make a post to /u/username instead of any specific subreddit, and then the post is only visible on your user page.
It’s unclear what exact meaning the person I replied to meant, but it’s definitely not the technical one, considering their wording. So with “Mbin doesn’t actually support posting things to your profile yet” I meant it in the context established by OP.
Mbin doesn’t actually support posting things to your profile yet. Microblog posts still need to be posted to a particular community. They do plan to stop with that eventually and allow you to post outside of communities (recently mentioned on their Matrix), but that’s not a thing yet.
The website doesn’t work for me, the request times out.
Another interesting discovery: Compare the two links for each of the accounts marked with (*). You will notice that the posts on moist.catsweat.com link to YouTube, but when viewing the posts from lemmy.world those same posts link to the blogspot. Why is that?
Yeah, I think this is the real problem. It’s Youtube on the home instance, it’s not marked as edited (and even if it was, url changes are federated to Lemmy), and it federates as Youtube only (checked the AP response).
Where is Lemmy getting the blogspot from in the first place?
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For context for the people downvoting this: Lemmy doesn’t have karma, but Mbin does and it shows karma for Lemmy accounts too.
An instance being blocked by all other instances?
No, defederating is just a single instance blocking another instance, not the entire fediverse doing so.
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Thanks! Does Lemmy display something when people have their cake day so it’s easily visible? Mbin (which I use) doesn’t, so I wasn’t actually aware until I saw your comment.
They mentioned the flaws of both platforms.
In our case, it’s no established support for moving accounts.
Thanks for that edit.
Does it get stored there, or does it get forwarded to lemmy.world and stored there? If sh.itjust.works shuts down, does this comment disappear with it?
Your own content gets stored on your own instances and every instance it’s federated with. It’s not sh.itjust.works or lemmy.world, it’s both of them.
Oh, that’s what I meant. And Mbin calls it following too. I just said “subscribing” because it’s the same action behind the scenes, just different terms to refer to it, and I was using “communities” first in the same sentence.
subscribe to not just communities but also users
There’s Interstellar which is made by the admin of my instance. I don’t know if the Mbin devs have plans for their own official app.
Not sure what the point of public upvotes is,
Well, you can see who upvoted something. kbin also allowed seeing downvotes, but that got removed because of worries about harassment.
By looking at who upvoted a specific post you liked, you can find like-minded people to follow. I also find it cool to see the different instances and platforms the upvotes come from.
Boosting is a bit complicated. It’s supposed to be retweeting basically, and does work that way under the hood. Posts boosted from Mbin do appear that way from Mastodon. However, I don’t think Mbin itself currently treats boosts as more than just an even more public upvote (with regular upvotes you can see who upvoted a post, not what posts a user upvoted; boosts are publically listed on profiles).
I’m an Mbin user.
Mbin is a fork of kbin. Kbin’s dev didn’t really trust people much, so he wanted to have sole control over what code gets added to kbin. Which led to issues when he wasn’t available and development just came to a halt for months because no one could accept changes anymore. The other devs wanted more control so they could actually get shit done, so they decided to fork the project instead.
How different is it from Lemmy? I hear they have better integration with Mastodon.
I think the biggest difference is really the fact that you can subscribe to not just communities but also users. This is where the superior Mastodon compatibility comes into play by allowing us to see posts that don’t mention communities. Lemmy only sees Mastodon posts if they mention a community explicitly or an Mbin user has interacted with it.
There’s also other stuff like public upvotes, boosting, tags, reputation (karma), and custom community CSS. I don’t really know Lemmy well enough to give a full list of where they differ.
Swiss/Allemanic German. Specifically I speak Zug’s dialect.