I think it was fixed in 0.18.5 yea, I guess there could be some system to trust other moderators from other instances but then it's basically the same as it is now lol, where trusting==appointing moderators, really the same thing
Die4Ever
defederation is an admin action not a moderator action, and there are much fewer admins than there are moderators, so the workload would be a concern
Doesn't your suggestion mean that a user from a small instance or their own instance can make a bunch of garbage posts (or even illegal posts) and then a moderator from every single other instance will have to delete their posts separately? That's a ton of repeated work, and really opens up Lemmy to abuse.
Currently, communities are created and hosted on a single instance, and are moderated by moderators on that instance.
You can be a moderator of communities on different instances, my account here on programming.dev is a moderator of communities on other instances such as lemmy.ml
yea tlnet is perfect, thank you! subscribed
TL.net would be great for esports news https://tl.net/rss/news.xml
if tl is too short for a community name, maybe tl_net or teamliquid_net or something like that
it will be a good source to cross-post from (I wish Lemmy users used cross-posting more)
Yeah I think of downvotes as like micro-moderation, or crowd sourced curation. It's generally a good feature. They can be annoying sometimes but it's better than the alternative of bad/spam posts/comments flooding your feed.
RTA means "real time attack". In this case it just means a human is capable of doing the full run instead of only being able to do it in small pieces with tons of attempts, or TAS
And for anyone else, ACE means arbitrary code execution, where you can write values into memory where they will be executed as instructions
Make a Github pull request, examples:
https://github.com/LemmyNet/joinlemmy-site/pull/347
https://github.com/LemmyNet/joinlemmy-site/pull/354
the instance needs at least 5 active users
I'm not sure, you should definitely report that as a bug on the GitHub though