Also,
- What is your mother's maiden name?
- What is the name of the street you grew up on?
- What was the name of your first pet?
Also,
It's fedidb: https://fedidb.org/software/mbin
EDOT: Who gets it from here: https://fedia.io/nodeinfo/2.0
It is indeed. Main consequence of this is that if you join a new or small instance, you will see less of the fediverse without actively seeking it
By that logic, how do you learn to talk? Before you understand language, no one can explain the meaning of words to you.
I imagine this happens the same way. You "bootstrap" language by introducing a few touch signs and go from there.
What’s an instance?
An instance is a server running the Lemmy software (or some other federation software such as Mastodon, Kbin, Pixelfed, and others). Instances can talk together (similarly to how you can send email from gmail.com to outlook.com), so you can sign up on one instance and subscribe and comment to communities on other instances
What’s a community?
A community is to Lemmy what a subreddit is to Reddit. on
What are federations?
Federation is the machanism allowing different instances (servers) to talk together. Federation is automatic, so two instances becomes federated, when you as a user on one instance subscribe to a community on a different instance
Whats the difference between all these?
Many instances are general but have somewhat different values and rules for what you can post or not. "lemmy.world" is a good choice for a general instance. There are also topic specific instances, such as "mander.xyz" that is science focused.
What’s mastodon?
Mastodon is like twitter but is part of the federated universe (the "fediverse").
What’s Kbin?
Kbin - like Lemmy - is like Reddit. The impelemntation is different and focuses on different fetures. Some (myself included) like Kbin more than Lemmy - others the other way around.
What’s ActivityPub?
ActivityPub is the common technical protocol that allows all of the software in the Fediverse to talk together. Both Mastodon, Kbin and Lemmy (and others) are build "on top" of the ActivityPub protocol.
Hope this helps
GDPR is great, but it would probably not apply to posts and comments as it pertains to personal data (name, address). User provided content is not generally personal data as per GDPR (though might contain some). Positing personal data is even explicitly disallowed in most subs.
One could argue they need to delete username, although it is in principle arbitrary, but they could be allowed to keep post/comment content. And this already happens as part of account deletion.
On top of this, users agreed to transferring rights when accepting TOS:
"When Your Content is created with or submitted to the Services, you grant us a worldwide, royalty-free, perpetual, irrevocable, non-exclusive, transferable, and sublicensable license to use, copy, modify, adapt, prepare derivative works of, distribute, store, perform, and display Your Content and any name, username, voice, or likeness provided in connection with Your Content in all media formats and channels now known or later developed anywhere in the world."
Source: https://www.redditinc.com/policies/user-agreement/
Don't confuse this with me liking what Reddit is doing, it's a douchebag move, so we have all the reasons to distrust Reddit and be angry. I'm just trying to add nuance to the issue.
Obligatory IANAL
I have a central NAS server that hosts all my personal files and shares them (via smb, ssh, syncthing and jellyfin). It also pulls backups from all my local servers and cloud services (google drive, onedrive, dropbox, evernote, mail, calender and contacts, etc.). It runs zfs raid 1 and snapshots every 15 minute. Every night it backs up important files to Backblaze in a US region and azure in a EU region (using restic).
I have a bootstrap procedure in place to do a "clean room recovery" assuming I lost access to all my devices - i only need to remember a tediously long encryption password for a small package containing everything needed to recover from scratch. It is tested every year during Christmas holidays including comparing every single backed and restored file with the original via md5/sha256 comparison.
DYI NAS (mini-itx mobo with on-board atom chip and 8 GB ram and zfs) running:
Intel NUC running:
Intel NUC (DMZ) running:
Elon Musk: "Hold my beer"