Lemmy.ml, the most popular instance fo Lemmy out there, is not accessible in my country unless I use a VPN. But, I can subscribe to any community that exists on lemmy.ml from here and even post on those communities from this account.
I love this aspect of Lemmy.
I’m not sure that’s the case. Any country that blocks your end-user access to that server would also be blocking your local servers’ access to it too, after all its all just traffic to the firewall.Edit: Oh I get it now. If your country blocks access to foreign site lemmy.abc, but not to foreign site lemmy.xyz, you can join .xyz and subscribe to content from .abc. It will be interesting to see how quickly the whole fediverse gets blocked by strict countries now…
I suspect though that any differences in content most of us are seeing between servers at the moment are down to the massive load that they’re under. Generally the federation functionality seems to be the most processor-intensive and fragile part of the setup. I’ve also been able to access posts on struggling servers using apps that the native web front-end isn’t able to display.
Are you sure? If the government here in NZ blocks Lemmygrad (IIRC hosted in Switzerland) would that stop my home instance (Beehaw which I think is hosted in the USA) from being able to access Lemmygrad posts?
No, it wouldn’t. The Beehaw server is located in the United States. External communities aren’t retrieved via your machine, but via their server.
@mykl @AndreTelevise Or even better you can use the ActivityPub like me to send a comment from Mastodon to Lemmy.
So if they block every instance in Lemmy, which is impossible by the way, you can still use other fediverse social networks to access to it.
Yeah, I was careful to say fediverse rather than lemmy for that reason. I think a sufficiently motivated party could still make access very difficult to sustain. Whether anyone’s going to be that motivated remains to be seen.
@mykl There’s only one issue with the ActivityPub.
Which is:
- Is more feasible to make an account into Lemmy or Kbin to comment, save posts or give them thumbs up/down than to access to the ActivityPub from another social network in the fediverse.
For example to make these comments into Lemmy from Mastodon I had to search for a guide on internet to make it possible. ActivityPub isn’t user friendly which is the main issue in the entire fediverse (issues with UI and UX).
I certainly admit your dedication in working it out 😀
I knew it was a feature, but I suspect it’s one of those things that will make little sense to most people until power-users start using it to build extraordinary features and services that we don’t even know we need yet.
@mykl I make it work, but there’s interoperability issues.
Right now I can see that one of my comments got like 2 thumbs up. The issue is that I can’t see it on Mastodon, not even like a “favorite ⭐” which is the closest thing.
Also I gave you a “favorite”, but Lemmy don’t register it as a thumbs up, so probably you only gonna see some of my interactions with you, only if you access through the Mastodon UI.
Also I can’t find the way to follow people from Lemmy and bookmark/save their posts.
Well, early days I suppose. Now they’re both receiving a lot more attention I hope that these sorts of issues will get addressed. If you enjoy the pain I hope you’ve checked out how it all works with kbin too!
@mykl Right now I think that I’ll leave the ActivityPub for now.
Is easier just to make an account in lemmy.ca and in kbin.social than trying to reply comments/toots, find a way make the comment in first place, to try to follow someone and also to find a way to save content from another social network.
Also ActivityPub allows me to make a post on Lemmy from Mastodon on any of their “subreddits/communities”.
The issue I can only post and reply 500 characters. Which is very annoying.
This will be nearly impossible. Popular instances can be blocked but someone can simply create a new small one each time. It is eternal cat and mouse. Censorship by the country where it is hosted however will be effective for that instance but no other.
Sure nearly impossible to do 100% but if you put enough cats on the job you can make life tough for the mice :-)