sneakyninjapants

joined 2 years ago
[–] sneakyninjapants 1 points 1 year ago

I think we'll start on The Ancient Magus' Bride S2. Really liked the first one and didn't really expect a second season, so excited to see what S2 has in store.

[–] sneakyninjapants 5 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Hey, no worries. I'm new too, and most of us here are learning as we go. For communities there should be a link along the top bar next to the "Create Post" button (screenshot of my instance attached). Click it and it will take you to a page where you can name your new community and fill out other details about it. Once you've got it created feel free to post a link here! I'm sure we all will be interested in following a new art community.

[–] sneakyninjapants 1 points 1 year ago

Awesome! Ironically, I'm currently in the middle of S2, so now I'm wishing I'd started this closer to release. Though I am glad to see another season is coming for 2024.

[–] sneakyninjapants 4 points 1 year ago

Nice! Thanks for the release update!

[–] sneakyninjapants 13 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Just to clarify, are you wanting to create an instance (an entire server like lemmy.ca, lemmy.ml, lemmy.world), or a community (a subreddit like [email protected], [email protected], [email protected])? Instructions differ greatly depending on your answer.

[–] sneakyninjapants 6 points 1 year ago

/c/main is probably the best place to ask this question imo, more eyeballs.

[–] sneakyninjapants 3 points 1 year ago

Like MehStrongBadMeh said. PLA especially gets brittle like this when it's drawn in too much water. Try sticking it in a filament dryer/dehydrator for 24 hours and see if that goes away.

[–] sneakyninjapants 1 points 1 year ago
[–] sneakyninjapants 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Of course and thank you. I agree completely. I think going forward, that instance admins who are utilizing a defense-in-depth strategy with tools like Lemmy Overseer, automated account creation hurdles, and other emergent tools (one example) will be the most effective in keeping this part of the federation largely free of the bot-swarm.

[–] sneakyninjapants 9 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

I've expressed concerns about the potential effects of a bot-swarm before, and have had a few mildly constructive conversations about it. Here is a thread where I lay out a few of my concerns on the matter, but I'll copy the relevant text here for easier discovery.


Me:

I’m all for bots that are used as tools for the community, the invidious one seems pretty great too. A bit concerned about what the potential “bot army” on some of these instances will be used for going forward though.

@[email protected]

There is an option to hide bot accounts in your account settings. This is also why all bots must be tagged as such so people can choose if they want to see them or not, that’s the agreement with allowing bots on Lemmy for most instances.

Me:

I guess with that in mind, that brings different concerns into view for me. I’m wondering what proportion of this wave of bots have checked that option identifying themselves as such? If they’re good bots they will of course, but I’ve also read through posts of instance operators claiming they’ve gotten thousands of bot signups in hours, which doesn’t seem like good bot behavior to me. Are they likely to identify themselves as bots? Even if they did, would it matter? One example off the cuff, I should be able filter bots from my feed and comments as you say, but what’s stopping them from upvoting / downvoting a specific group of user’s submissions and comments to the top of my hot feed, or upvoting / downvoting by keyword? If that happens en-masse you wouldn’t really be able to say that posts and comments are being ranked or discovered organically based on merit. While this sort of thing I suspect happens often elsewhere, it can serve to control the flow of information based on a single or small group of people’s will(s).


That is just one of the more insidious possibilities that a bot-swarm could be used for. Spamming, scamming, brigading, and poisoning discussions en-masse are all possible with even a moderately sized number of bots with the technical ability to put them to use on a platform of this size.

I've also seen announcement posts and the resulting post in The Agora covering the use of one tool (The Lemmy Overseer) that can help to automate the de/refederation of likely bot-infested instances. While I don't think the tool is going to deter particularly motivated actors, it should take care of the "low-hanging fruit" that is the tens of thousands of suspected bot accounts that have had no engagement on the platform since account creation. Instance owners take on a lot of responsibility when federating with others, just one of which is being responsible for securing their instance against automated signups. Once they take care of their bot problem they can become refederated automatically.

TLDR: I think we should defederate botted instances preemptively. Automatic refederation is possible, and a Matrix channel for instance operators exists for discussing refederation as a fallback measure.

[–] sneakyninjapants 2 points 1 year ago

Check this out. Not integrated like in Plex (yet), but it's a solution.

Not exactly related, but this extension also seems kind of cool.

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