For example
Looks pretty good! .onion site, lots of options with really low prices, and you can pay using Monero, thanks!
You can probably contact them on Matrix, but as far as I know lemmy.ml no longer accepts to create new communities.
Spaces are a headache whenever you’re not using a graphical interface.
No worries, and as I was saying, that’s why I’ve shared the article through my site, without ads
I shared the article through my link precisely because the site is “overly bloated” with ads…
If that’s a problem, no trouble, I’ll share the original links from now on!
Wdym?
It’s already a standard on the Fediverse! and I guess on other places too
I think you should be able to block a bot from a community exactly as a user.
Neglecting a fundamental right: the right to vote.
Looks like this comes from https://www.hexbear.net/, as I understand they started federating today (https://www.hexbear.net/post/273380) with 23K users and 271K posts.
This would explain the spike in the number of users and the number of publications. So no, they’re not bots
Users:
Posts:
If you’re comfortable with Python, you can try this out: Lemmy.py
I don’t think there’s a way of doing this automatically at the moment.
With Lemmy’s API you could set up a bot that takes care of listing all the local communities on a remote server and then searching them from yours, which would make them appear in your search results.
But if you want the publications of this remote community to federate with your server, you need to have a local user subscribed to it.
Even though this account is new because it was created a few days ago with the server I’ve set up (lemmy.cat), I’ve been on Lemmy for a while and have contributed to its development (documentation and translation).
I’d love to be able to help moderate one of the most important communities, not only in terms of the number of people, but also in terms of what it represents.
You cand try adding more trackers to your torrent
https://newtrackon.com/