Sometimes the canvas takes a bit to load
i’m the canvas guy (!canvas@toast.ooo)
Mastodon - @grant@grants.cafe
Sometimes the canvas takes a bit to load
when the event goes live, it’ll be a website you can login to and place pixels
the login system sends a DM to your account with a code to verify your identity, no passwords are used
oh shit i didn’t see this notification 😅
keep an eye out 👀
Oh hey it’s also toast’s 1 year as well 🎉
After taking a glance at the AppStore page for it, it looks like direct tipping/paywalled content instead of advertisements but I could be wrong
Tipping/paywalling seems like a step in the right direction, avoiding advertisements
Something that I’d love to see in a fediverse server that exposes the client-to-server standard of creating statuses instead of just the Mastodon API
Mastodon on iOS adds a button to the URL share sheet to open any url within Mastodon, and if it’s an ActivityPub object, will load the post inside Mastodon
Does the Android version have something similar?
I feel like it’s because of the risky nature of video content and it appearing to be hosted by the site
I run a small instance that doesn’t have open registrations and is very limited in who it follows to prevent risky videos from accidentally being rehosted (and to host content I helped make)
I would definitely reword your original post, it’s very misleading with how it’s worded now
(Eg “How I feel” -> “how individual users feel”)
It was really easy to update as well this time around
Lemmy instances can enable an option to prevent non-admins from creating communities, so if it isn’t available on your instance (usually in the header area on the website) then your instance admins have disabled that option
A possible solution to moderation is allowing communities to delete a parent comment (+ the child comments) from that community w/o actually fully deleting the comment
Therefore if you view that specific post with the context of a specific community, you only see the comments that are not deleted, which have (most likely) been moderated already
If you view the source post directly, you would see all the comments for that post
With the feature request I posted on GitHub, it would work similarly to reposting/reblogging on Mastodon.
Except inside Lemmy anyone who can post in the community would (most likely) create a post linking to an existing post and it would appear that the post mentioned just got posted into that community
Moderators would ideally see who created that crosspost and have the ability to block that person from crossposting (or posting entirely) to that community w/o affecting the third-party post
If someone wouldn’t want their posts crossposted they can just block the community’s actor (account)
It would also allow for Lemmy users to crosspost posts from other Fediverse services, such as Mastodon
Eg you see a post on Mastodon that would fit great in a startrek community, you would be able to cross post that Mastodon post into that community
This would enable individual posts to gain traction and comments without having comments/replies being spread across multiple places
Edit: it would work very similarly to reposting/reblogging on mastodon
Video hosting is a very expensive process and peertube does a lot more stuff to video files compared to Lemmy/mastodon
I’m not sure if this would be feasible for development or peertube hosts but idk, it would be a neat idea though
I don’t know Rust well enough to implement it in the core of Lemmy, instead it’d be another service instances would run then do some reverse proxy magic to properly run it on their servers
but I’m planning to use it for canvas 2024, so in a couple months there should be at least a functional version published on github (or some other code platform) (i’ll post updates to this on !canvas@toast.ooo & probably my mastodon)
OpenID is a federated protocol and it would honestly be great if Fediverse projects added it to the core servers
The instances page at join-lemmy is completely automated
This definitely needs to get pushed to the two main devs for lemmy as they control that website
No worries man, it’s a definite change from how the internet currently exists (i’ll make a landing page explaining all these in more detail in the coming days)
The first link, !canvas@toast.ooo, will open up the community (the Lemmy equivalent of Reddit’s “subreddits”). Being subscribed to that community will allow posts to the community to show up in your home feed
Matrix is a chat protocol that is a federated live chat system, the Matrix protocol is not ActivityPub (what Lemmy, Mastodon and others run on) it runs on it’s own protocol. The most popular client for Matrix is Element. You can host your own homeserver using Synapse, but it’s highly recommended to use their main instance (matrix.org
– it’s also the default option when you open Element in browser).
Matrix is setup in a way that you don’t have to worry about missing old messages when you are on a new instance. When you join a new room (“channel”) in Matrix, you will automatically be able to read old chat messages by backfilling old messages. Matrix also runs a very convenient website to share rooms with other people (matrix.to
– which is linked in my original comment) that will open a list of apps to open the room with (no vendor lock in).
Matrix is designed in a way were it doesn’t matter what instance you are registered under. No matter the instance, you’ll be able to read the chat, history and participate in live conversation.
Hopefully this cleaned some stuff up for you and like I said at the start of the post, I’ll be making a landing page also explaining this stuff to help other people navigate this as well :)
(cc others in this thread: @Psythik@lemm.ee & @AndreTelevise@lemmy.world )
Everything was rebooting, it should work now 👍