• BigFig
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    1325 days ago

    This is a . world community though…unless .ml is somehow able to filter their user’s posts??

      • @Kecessa
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        2525 days ago

        Correct, the user is on .ml (if others hadn’t noticed) so his comments are hosted on that server.

        • @[email protected]
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          124 days ago

          Are they? So if I read a post where users from hundreds of different servers are commenting, my phone has to make hundreds of requests to all those servers? Doesn’t seem right

          • @[email protected]
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            323 days ago

            Your phone queries your home instance, your instance fetches comments from the other servers.

    • @can
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      1425 days ago

      Yes that’s exactly what ml is doing. They have a slur filter.

          • @can
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            225 days ago

            dot ml is the only mainstream on to implement it afaik.

            There was a time (before the api exodus) where the devs were planning on making the filter compulsory for all instances, you can guess how that went.

            • @[email protected]
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              225 days ago

              That seems ridiculous.

              I mean I can understand that some communities might be legit triggered by certain words, but just implement the filter between that instance and the users of that instance.

              Imposing it on all instances would be insane. If you don’t like the words that other instance are showing then don’t use that instance. That’s the strength of the fediverse concept to me, policies tailored to the community that’s on an instance.

    • @[email protected]
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      25 days ago

      Check the user’s extension. He’s on ML posting to a discussion on WORLD. It makes perfect sense because unless the instance admins specifically block an instance then any instance’s users can post to any other instance community. That’s what Federation means. We’re all on individual instances that create a larger connected whole. That’s why the instance the user picks decides what they can post and where to.

      • @can
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        225 days ago

        It makes perfect sense because unless the instance admins specifically block an instance then any instance’s users can post to any other instance community. That’s what Federation means.

        Sorry to be that guy, but for clarity I believe at least for Lemmy that describes a blacklist configuration. Other option is similar where no instances are federated unless explicitly added to a white list like hexbear (?)

        • @[email protected]
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          225 days ago

          That is plausible but defeats the entire point of Federation in the first place. It makes sense for Hexbear to control the narrative their viewers see, though.