Posted by the comic author here btw: https://sh.itjust.works/post/51473460
freamon
Mostly just used for moderation.
Main account is https://piefed.social/u/andrew_s
- 7 Posts
- 31 Comments
On RT, the TV show Pluribus has a critic score of 98%, and an audience score of 69%, so maybe the The Onion’s joke about how Breaking Bad fans are not going to like it had something to it.

freamon@lemmy.worldtoLemmy Support@lemmy.ml•Problems with seeing post from a specific community.
2·11 months agoOkay. Well, if it’s fixed, that’s all that matters, I guess. I don’t understand this desire to downgrade other people’s answers into speculation, but it’s not like this is the first time it’s happened.
Language selection with Lemmy is pretty unintuitive, so others may be interested to know that OP is technically incorrect here. Despite what the UI says, it’s actually impossible to deselect ‘undetermined’. Whatever frontend you’re using might let you, but the backend will just ignore it. I don’t use this account much, but I used it here to make a very deliberate decision to send my earlier response using ‘undetermined’ as the language, so that OP would definitely see it, and the fact that they clearly did demonstrates for itself that what they’re suggesting is nonsense.
freamon@lemmy.worldtoLemmy Support@lemmy.ml•Problems with seeing post from a specific community.
3·11 months agoUsing a web browser, go to your account settings. In ‘languages’ ensure that ‘English’ is selected. The posts will then be visible to you when you are logged in.
You’ve made this post in the ‘afaraf’ language, so you may as well deselect that while you’re there if you don’t understand it. This of course means that most people here won’t see this post, ironically enough.
Also, if folks could stop parroting out the same bullshit ‘federation delays’ answer to every question, that’d be great. It’s not that. It’s actually very rarely that (even if you were the very first person to discover that community, which you weren’t, it’d only take a refresh to resolve it).
I screenshotted this from their ‘trending’ page, which suggests that their content is garbage and their tech is fucked.

Tragically, this also means that, even after 31 years, I’ve still never ‘get good’ enough.
freamon@lemmy.worldto
Lemmy@lemmy.ml•Why aren't my posts showing up on my profile page? Is this a bug?English
1·2 years agoYeah, I know what you mean. That note is misleading, and kinda redundant too - you can physically de-select Undetermined in the UI, but the change won’t actually take if you press ‘Save’.
freamon@lemmy.worldto
Lemmy@lemmy.ml•Why aren't my posts showing up on my profile page? Is this a bug?English
9·2 years agoMost likely reason is that you unticked ‘English’ as a language you understand when you were playing around.
Well, there’s good news and bad news.
The good news is that Lemmy is now surrounding your spoilers with the expected Details and Summary tags, and moving the HR means PieFed is able to interpret the Markdown for both spoilers.
The bad news:
It turns out KBIN doesn’t understand Details/Summary tags (even though a browser on it own does, so that’s KBIN’s problem).
Neither PieFed, or KBIN, or MS Edge looking at raw HTML can properly deal with a list that starts at ‘0’.
Lemmy is no longer putting List tags around anything inside the spoilers. (so this post now looks worse on KBIN. Sorry about that KBIN users)
Firstly, sorry for any potential derailment. This is a comment about the Markdown used in your post (I wouldn’t normally mention it, but consider it fair game since this is a ‘Fediverse’ community).
The spec for lemmy’s spoiler format is colon-colon-colon-space-spoiler. If you miss out the space, then whilst other Lemmy instances can reconstitute the Markdown to see this post as intended, Lemmy itself doesn’t generate the correct HTML when sending it out over ActivityPub. This means that other Fediverse apps that just look at the HTML (e.g. Mastodon, KBIN) can’t render it properly.
Screenshot from kbin:

Also, if you add a horizontal rule without a blank line above it, Markdown generally interprets this as meaning that you want the text above it to be a heading. So anything that doesn’t have the full force of Lemmy’s Markdown processor that is currently trying to re-make the HTML from Markdown now has to deal with the ending triple colons having ‘h2’ tags around it.
Screenshot from piefed:

(apologies again for being off-topic)
freamon@lemmy.worldOPto
Fediverse@lemmy.world•Quick video demonstrating that lemmy.world sends every activity out twiceEnglish
1·2 years agoUpdate: for LW, this behaviour stopped around about Friday 12th April. Not sure what changed, but at least the biggest instance isn’t doing it anymore.
freamon@lemmy.worldOPto
Fediverse@lemmy.world•Quick video demonstrating that lemmy.world sends every activity out twiceEnglish
8·2 years agoI’ve since relented, and filed a bug
freamon@lemmy.worldOPto
Fediverse@lemmy.world•Quick video demonstrating that lemmy.world sends every activity out twiceEnglish
22·2 years agoWhen I’ve mentioned this issue to admins at lemmy.ca and endlesstalk.org (relevant posts here and here), they’ve suggested it’s a misconfiguration. When I said the same to lemmy.world admins (relevant comment here), they also suggested it was misconfig. I mentioned it again recently on the LW channel, and it was only then was Lemmy itself proposed as a problem. It happens on plenty of servers, but not all of them, so I don’t know where the fault lies.
freamon@lemmy.worldOPto
Fediverse@lemmy.world•Quick video demonstrating that lemmy.world sends every activity out twiceEnglish
163·2 years agoA bug report for software I don’t run, and so can’t reproduce would be closed anyway. I think ‘steps to reproduce’ is pretty much the first line in a bug report.
If I ran a server that used someone else’s software to allow users to download a file, and someone told me that every 2nd byte needed to be discarded, I like to think I’d investigate and contact the software vendors if required. I wouldn’t tell the user that it’s something they should be doing. I feel like I’m the user in this scenario.
freamon@lemmy.worldOPto
Fediverse@lemmy.world•Quick video demonstrating that lemmy.world sends every activity out twiceEnglish
231·2 years agoI can’t re-produce anything, because I don’t run Lemmy on my server. It’s possible to infer that’s it’s related to the software (because LW didn’t do this when it was on 0.18.5). However, it’s not something that, for example, lemmy.ml does. An admin on LW matrix chat suggested that it’s likely a combination of instance configuration and software changes, but a bug report from me (who has no idea how LW is set up) wouldn’t be much use.
I’d gently suggest that, if LW admins think it’s a configuration problem, they should talk to other Lemmy admins, and if they think Lemmy itself plays a role, they should talk to the devs. I could be wrong, but this has been happening for a while now, and I don’t get the sense that anyone is talking to anyone about it.
Removed by Mod vs. Deleted by User
(you may have already seen this - my original reply went to the wrong place. Which is another Sync bug incidentally, when using the notification to reply (Android))
If it’s something you feel strongly about, then for this reason, and the usual federation reasons, it’s probably better to overwrite your content with “[deleted]” or something, rather than delete it.
Removed by Mod vs. Deleted by User (sorry, this reply is in the wrong place)
Lemmy let’s you un-delete anything you’ve deleted, so nothing really gets nuked (it seems to be the way these things work anyway, that it’s just a ‘deleted’ flag that’s flipped between true and false).
On the one hand, it’s a Lemmy problem - I can see you’re comment using the API:
curl --request GET \ --url 'https://lemmy.world/api/v3/comment?id=8986376' \ --header 'accept: application/json' => { "comment_view": { "comment": { "id": 8986376, "creator_id": 399371, "post_id": 13748490, "content": "See what i mean? I deleted this!", "removed": false, "published": "2024-03-31T09:48:22.897008Z", "deleted": true, "ap_id": "https://lemmy.world/comment/8986376", "local": true, "path": "0.8986376", "distinguished": false, "language_id": 37 ...But there’s also a bug with Sync in that it’s not checking the flag if someone try to reply.





The code that OP has linked to is part of a convenience function for admins to add content to their new instances. It can query individual remote instances (e.g. lemmy.world), or it can query lemmyverse.net, and fetch communities that look to be popular and active.
It’s completely unrelated to routine federation, and doesn’t prevent anyone subscribing to communities that may have those words in their names.
The admin function could potentially be used to fetch hundreds of communities. It runs as a background process, so you don’t know what they were until after they’d been followed. The “bad words” list acts as a safeguard against bringing in things you might not want or expect. One reason is that you may want to curate the first impression you give new visitors, as there as some that will be put off by the “fuck this” and “shitpost that” reddit-isms. Another is that you don’t typically want communities that are disproportionately popular than others (e.g. if you bring in the default 25 communities, and one of is 196, then it completely dominate your front page).
If there’s a particular community that you are interested in (e.g. because you moderate it), using this function isn’t an efficient way to add it. In addition to the “bad words” filters, it will also exclude communities that are NSFW, or below thresholds for popularity and activity. Rather than fetching a bunch of communities at the same time, and hoping that the one you want is included, it’s better to just add it manually (via a
!link or by using the “Add remote community” link) in much the same way as you would on any other platform.