

This is really trivial to get around: https://gist.github.com/mary-ext/6e27b24a83838202908808ad528b3318
This is really trivial to get around: https://gist.github.com/mary-ext/6e27b24a83838202908808ad528b3318
Do we have site of any Lemmy instances that defederate from us? It’ll be interesting to see if many do.
Why would they? They’re only legally liable for their own users, not ours.
Too bad cryptobros are more interested in using it as a speculative investment/scam machine than an actual currency.
This is the Torygraph, don’t read the comments unless you want to do psyc damage to yourself.
It is open source, though the section in the FAQ just links to github.com, but I found the actual source code: https://github.com/patchwork-hub/channels. Seems to be a Mastodon fork, which becomes even more apparent when you actually look at a channel: https://channel.org/@feelgoodart
From what I can gather, this is a way of having an account boost content from certain creators or hashtags with some filters applied on top, honestly pretty cool but I wish they explained it better than ‘connecting the open social web’. Like the page explaining it has a terminal case of marketing speak.
He’s actually already the most popular politician on TikTok.
However, Chris Weston, its chief executive, told MPs that the company needed an exemption from the £1.4 billion in fines he expects the regulators, Ofwat and the Environment Agency, to impose for future breaches of environmental and performance rules.
Won’t somebody think of the poor company facing the consequences of its own actions.
Could you change the title to match the actual article title, not all clients show the original and editorialised titles are against the rules.
Turns out they lied, one book targeted at adults got moved from the welcome area to further back in the library. Truly an impressively incompetent bunch these Reform councilors.
Client side moderation is a Bluesky thing, I imagine this wouldn’t work on Reddit et al. but that depends on how it’s implemented and is going to be specific to whatever website you’re accessing. Or you can just use a VPN, like the BBC put it: