Say no more, I’m sold
Here you go. This might answer some questions you have https://www.healthcare.gov/what-if-im-pregnant-or-plan-to-get-pregnant
Al Jazeera live broadcast shows Hamas rocket breaking up above the hospital shortly before explosion
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Lemmy.ml will likely never defederate from lemmygrad, as the owners themselves are tankies. If you want to distance yourself, I suggest moving instances.
There’s an account migration tool someone made that could make this easier for you https://github.com/CMahaff/lasim
I had an idea about this today but I don’t know enough about Lemmy to confirm it. Thought I’d run it by you just in case.
Could you create a post and lock it normally, then directly edit the postgres row to unlock the post? I’m wondering if this would federate the lock but not federate your unlock causing all outside users to see a lock and all internal users see an unlocked post.
Possible edge case: users who subscribe to the community after the unlock will receive the initial data dump of posts and this will include the post in its current unlocked state.
However, this would be an easy way to block the majority commenting on a post while maintaining a seemless experience for your internal users.
Wouldn’t it make a difference in cases where the nameserver and host are not the same entity?
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Lemmy.world is NOT defederated from lemmy.ml. the above user is completely wrong.
This is easily verifiable by going to https://lemmy.world/instances and scroll to the bottom to see which ones are blocked
I love how you spent more time defending your wrongness than correcting the mistake. Like is it that hard to hit the edit button
After attempting to manufacture the radar domestically, Roscosmos determined that it was unnecessary for the mission.
Lol.
Terrorists
Thanks Satan
If the intention is to have an internal, instance-only post, I believe such a thing could be enforced with an automoderator bot. I had a lot of success throwing the Lemmy API into an AI and generating my own moderator bot from that. Could work for you.
Fair point, I agree there should be such a check. It seems for now that the only ones affected were people who tried to intentionally mess with it. It will be a hard goal to reach completely because what’s ok and healthy for some could also be a deathly allergic reaction for others. There’s always going to have to be some personal accountability for the person preparing a meal to understand what they’re making is safe.
That’s a bit dramatic of a take. The AI makes recipe suggestions based on ingredients the user inputs. These users inputted things like bleach and glue, and other non-food items, to intentionally generate non-food recipes.
I don’t think the average person understands how advanced bots have become at bypassing captchas now. Users will see this and be upset, and understandably so, but I’m telling you there is a big problem right now and devs are having trouble keeping up.