- 37 Posts
- 129 Comments
RagingHungryPanda@lemm.eeto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Wanting to restart my Webcomic. Any alternative to Wordpress that I could use on my website?
2·6 months agoYou need to follow it, but the thing is, you’re probably just as well off posting a link from your own account. It comes up as a separate account for me. I don’t think the federation there is really worth it
RagingHungryPanda@lemm.eeto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Wanting to restart my Webcomic. Any alternative to Wordpress that I could use on my website?
2·6 months agoI’m hosting writefreely with picsur as the image host for my blog. They’re pretty lightweight. Otherwise a static site generator like others suggested.
RagingHungryPanda@lemm.eeto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Wanting to restart my Webcomic. Any alternative to Wordpress that I could use on my website?
3·7 months agoWhat format are you looking for? Something like a comic layout?
RagingHungryPanda@lemm.eeto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•how do I know that you guys are real and not bots?
1·7 months agoI asked it to be more concise:
Response:
“Great point! It’s crucial to stay vigilant against bot activity on any platform. To detect bots, consider examining account history for inconsistencies, checking posting patterns that appear automated, and looking out for suspicious usernames. For server admins, collaborating with other instance admins can help share information and best practices. While no system is foolproof, proactive measures can significantly mitigate risks. Let’s work together to foster trust and maintain authenticity within our communities!”
RagingHungryPanda@lemm.eeto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•how do I know that you guys are real and not bots?
2·7 months agoI asked my deepseek r1:14b model and it gave this. It is quite wordy and likes bullet points. I wouldn’t bother typing all this out.
Thank you for bringing up these important questions about bot detection and trust in online communities. These are valid concerns, especially as technology evolves and becomes more sophisticated.
Verification on Reddit: While Reddit does employ measures to detect bots (such as CAPTCHAs and rate limiting), it’s true that no system is foolproof. However, the platform has been actively working on improving its anti-bot mechanisms over time. As a user or admin, staying informed about these measures can help us understand how communities are moderated.
Lemmy and Other Instances: On platforms like Lemmy (a federated social network), trust in other instances can be challenging because each instance operates independently. However, as a server admin, you can take steps to verify the credibility of an instance:
* Manual Verification: You can manually check accounts on other instances by reviewing their posting patterns and content for consistency with human behavior.
* Community Standards: Look for instances that follow similar community guidelines or moderation practices to yours. This can help ensure a level of trustworthiness. * Transparency: Instances that are transparent about their moderation policies and allow communication between admins are generally more trustworthy.Future Concerns: As AI and bot technology advance, the risk of sophisticated bots mimicking human behavior will increase. However, staying proactive by implementing verification systems (like PII checks) and educating your community about suspicious activity can mitigate these risks.
Spam vs. Human-like Bots: While traditional spam bots are easier to detect, human-like bots that use statistical data to mimic patterns are more insidious. This is why relying solely on automated tools isn’t enough—it requires a combination of technology and human oversight.
As server admins, we must remain vigilant but not overly discouraged. By fostering open communication within our communities and collaborating with other instance admins, we can build a network that prioritizes trust and authenticity.
It IS a more helpful thing than “This should never happen.”
Thanks, I’ll check that out
RagingHungryPanda@lemm.eeto
Fuck Cars@lemmy.world•5-minute headway isn't ideal, but it's a huge step in the right direction. I'm quite stoked for this.English
8·7 months agoI saw a joke where someone in Germany said they arrived too late for the 7:30am train, but were just in time for the 6:30am train. It’s like a meme how late they are.
I am not for the life of me seeing where to add a tag or a label. I checked in 3 different UIs, including the main one.
I had thought whether there should be lemmy, pixelfed, and maybe mastodon for local cities.
I’ve been saving all of these today. Thanks a bunch!
RagingHungryPanda@lemm.eeto
Fuck Cars@lemmy.world•5-minute headway isn't ideal, but it's a huge step in the right direction. I'm quite stoked for this.English
24·7 months agoI wish we had 5 minute headways haha.
I’ve got Idrive backups at 5TB for like $5 a month or something.
RagingHungryPanda@lemm.eeto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•What's up, selfhosters? It's selfhosting Sunday again!English
2·7 months agoOh that’s dope. How many hours are you running? Do you also use them for things like encoding or something like that?
RagingHungryPanda@lemm.eeto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•What's up, selfhosters? It's selfhosting Sunday again!English
6·7 months agoSweet!
What’s up is everything I’ve been running and down is what I haven’t.
not working
I haven’t been able to get friendica to connect to Maria DB, so I’ll eventually try just MySql. Grafana isn’t running bc I would need to change a lot of things to get an exporter into each container and the truenas apps don’t really allow that configuration - fine if you have docker compose though, which I’ve started doing more and more.
new
I just got up and running with Stirling pdf, a free (and paid) PDF editor. That looks pretty sweet.
But I’m now also using 15GB of the 32 on the system, which is still plenty for Arc cache for me
what I want
I want to rent a VPS to host various fediverse apps, probably Lemmy, pixelfed, and write freely to start, for the nomad/expect communities. I’ve been looking at netcup and they have some decent arm offerings.
I’d like to put Talos Linux on it so I can get some kubernetes experience. They have a good sized server for €10, so I could expand to add a DB server or one specifically for logging and metrics.
I was looking at Hetzner, but I’ve read that their block storage is super slow and causes timeouts on DB.
Of course, can I even run these apps on arm? I guess I gotta find that out.
One thing I’d like to do is make a web page that makes signups super easy and would create an account on all services, ideally. Not a huge deal of that isn’t reasonable, but it’d be nice to allow doing it once rather than multiple times. If I could get sso, that’d be good, but I don’t know how supported that is.
I’m actually watching a video about that, complete with studies and everything.
RagingHungryPanda@lemm.eeto
Manga@ani.social•Usuzumi no Hate (The Color of the End: Mission in the Apocalypse) Volume 4 CoverEnglish
2·7 months agoThanks for the write up! It’s definitely got my curiosity
RagingHungryPanda@lemm.eeto
Manga@ani.social•Usuzumi no Hate (The Color of the End: Mission in the Apocalypse) Volume 4 CoverEnglish
3·7 months agothis looks pretty cool. Have you read it? What do you think about it?
RagingHungryPanda@lemm.eeto
Fediverse@lemmy.world•Fediverse.com is available for saleEnglish
2·7 months agoyou’d probably be better off setting up your own domain server and trying to get that working
















I’ve been there. I recommend it. I dove-tailed it with a trip to Baden-Baden (a hot spring town with a great sauna resort) and a day trip to Carlesrue(?). The black forest is nearby as well.
Do it!