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andrew_s

@andrew_s@piefed.social

This profile is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

andrew_s,
@andrew_s@piefed.social avatar

Decades ago, my school's drug info was similar: every drug had a single entry ('euphoria') in the Pros column and a massive list (ending with death) for the Cons column.

andrew_s, (edited )
@andrew_s@piefed.social avatar

There was a great windows app called 'dvdshrink' that let you rip commercial DVDs onto blank DVDs (shrinking them if necessary). It got taken down with a Cease & Desist, but the MPAA or whoever didn't worry about who took the domain. For a long time, the site was just filled with ads instead - now it's a bit more sophisticated: no real link to download the software, but lots of genuine-seeming donation requests.

The fake site is at the first search result for that software (edit: it's probably best not to link directly to it)

andrew_s,
@andrew_s@piefed.social avatar

Rey just 'okey-dokied' her way through the entire trilogy.

andrew_s,
@andrew_s@piefed.social avatar

That sounds like a tricky combination. Wherever you go, they'll be a good chunk of users who are unaware of / indifferent to how well the app they're using interacts with other Fediverse platforms. Mastodon has the userbase, and - as you say - is the place where the serious discussion of accessibility takes place.

As for Lemmy - it doesn't yet support alt-text, but when it does, I believe that the plan is to follow Mastodon's format (i.e. a 'name' field in the 'attachment' array)

andrew_s,
@andrew_s@piefed.social avatar

Oh right, yeah. I was thinking more of the images that people link to with posts. Lemmy currently sends those out, with

"attachment": [
    {
      "href": "<a href="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/e798447e-a79f-45b2-b3da-3aa669cbc0e5.png" rel="nofollow ugc" target="_blank">https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/e798447e-a79f-45b2-b3da-3aa669cbc0e5.png</a>",
      "type": "Link"
    }
  ]

But there's nowhere in entire JSON for any alt-text. The plan is to add alt-text as a 'name' in there.

In-line images do prove a point for the OP, though. A Lemmy comment with one will be sent out as
&lt;img src="<a href="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/9d483052-29b6-4d34-baaf-3ee092be9718.png" rel="nofollow ugc" target="_blank">https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/9d483052-29b6-4d34-baaf-3ee092be9718.png</a>" alt="bear vs man in woods meme" /> in the 'content' field, but Mastodon expects all images to be attachments, so it just completely ignores it. (compare https://lemmy.zip/comment/10342640 with https://mastodon.social/@Honytawk@lemmy.zip/112438348076482957).

andrew_s,
@andrew_s@piefed.social avatar

Fetishes are irrational by definition. They're not passed down - they come about from childhood hang-ups (no-one wants to be eaten by a bear because their father or grandfather wanted to be eaten by a bear).

andrew_s,
@andrew_s@piefed.social avatar

Yeah - I think anything the UI is doing, it's getting the info from the API, so the poster would've had to use the 'cross-post' feature. There are some apps (e.g. Voyager) that try to wrangle cross-posts by title or URL, but title-matching can give false postives, and URL-matching usually assumes that one link hasn't picked up some cruft, and it can't do much for uploaded images if the poster didn't cross-post (because it'll be 2 different files with different URLs)

andrew_s,
@andrew_s@piefed.social avatar

Oh, right. Sorry. I've gone back and checked the post I was thinking of when I made that comment, and - yeah - it turns out I was misremembering / didn't properly investigate the first time.

andrew_s,
@andrew_s@piefed.social avatar

Might just be 'cos LW is currently sending every activity out twice. Video from earlier today: https://imgur.com/a/lX0LPZk

You could probably tail your nginx log in another terminal to see if the journalctl errors match up with 400 errors for duplicates there..

Might not be this, of course (could just be that I saw this earlier, and it's influencing my thinking)

andrew_s,
@andrew_s@piefed.social avatar

The video was recording a VM that had been tunnelled through to with ngrok, so the HTTP details were from that software's 'Inspect' window.

(I don't know how best to configure your server to ignore the errors, because Rust is too scary, ha ha).

andrew_s,
@andrew_s@piefed.social avatar

Congrats. Tesseract has always been very impressive.

This post suggests there's a problem with Lemmy/PeerTube federation, but it'll be good to see the videos embedded (even if they have to be brought through manually)

andrew_s,
@andrew_s@piefed.social avatar

Oh. If you're viewing this post from a Lemmy instance, there's a comment tree missing because Lemmy didn't sign its request for the Mastodon user's details. Hopefully, this'll come in 0.19.4

andrew_s,
@andrew_s@piefed.social avatar

That's arguably the expected behaviour - for a discussion, 'link' effectively takes you to the comments, for an article (or a link to a image), it takes you there instead.

You could use 'guid' instead - that always links to the post on Lemmy, and it usually contains a useful thing on other sites' RSS feeds.

andrew_s,
@andrew_s@piefed.social avatar

Oh, okay. Citing the specs is a good argument killer.

There's a Closed Issue relating to this at https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/issues/3540
From there you can navigate to the right place to open a new Issue if you want.

andrew_s, (edited )
@andrew_s@piefed.social avatar

Have just seen your edit.

No idea whether you'll get this or not. You should do, even it's only as an Inbox message (sent if there's no subscribers to this community on lemm.ee, because it'll reject this if that's the case).

My first reply made it to lemmy.ml (see https://lemmy.ml/post/15165488), so that suggests the federation issue was on Lemmy's end, not PieFed's. (I'll see if this reply makes it to .ml, to confirm).

Edit: actually, just checked lemme.ee, and this reply is there, so 'Ner', and indeed, 'Ner'.

[freamon] Currently working on: Following Users

There's more than one way to do this, of course. For group-based forums like piefed, I think the most promising way is to automatically create a local community for each person that someone wants to follow. Incoming activity is then put into the appropriate community, and so you have a consistent UI of UserA has posted to...

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