A refugee from reddit like a lot of others I guess. I registered to .world because it was open and .ml was kinda full. Now as the dust of mass migration starts to settle the leanings of different lemmy instances are becoming clearer. The fact that lemmygrad is just straight out batshit /r/Donald was pretty obvious right away. The fact that .ml passes downvotes to the CCP social score system was not. Federation starts to dissolve into islands of let’s call them “interests”. Two questions come to mind:

  1. Is there an overview of what instance is federated with what instance? A reason for defederation would be nice too.
  2. Is there one place where I can check moderation policy for this particular instance? Two of the instances I came across turned out to have “leanings” as already mentioned. May I cautiously ask what “leaning” if applicable I might encounter here?
  • ActuallyASeal@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    As far as I’m aware defederation is one way. If instance 1 defederates instance 2 it means they won’t accept posts, comments or any other data from the instance 2. But instance 2 is still capable of viewing the data from instances 1 much like an unlogged in user

    Looking at lemmy.ml/instances I dont see lemmy.world in the blocked list. I don’t think either has defederates the other. Are you thinking of Beehaw?

    Mastodon instances are technically able to interact with lemmy instances. Both platforms use the ActivityPub protocol. The issue for your average user is the UI frontend of the platforms don’t have anyway of doing the correct queries or display the information from each other. But if you use alternative interfaces, I think it’s basically just all command line utilities at the moment, you can view content and post across them. There should be some other platforms able to do this as well.