@strypey For example !GNUsocial allows for remote deletion but there is no guarantee that anyone cares about the requests. Take older #StatusNet installations for example, they don't support the 'delete' verb.
@drymer @hortelando yo entré hace un tiempo a probarlo creyendo que era eso, una interfaz de !gnusocial. Por eso algunos comentarios ahora me despistaban. Ahora veo que no era así.
Sobre la interfaz entiendo que lo de los gustos y las preferencias es muy de cada uno, pero a mi me gusta y me resulta más agradable y cómoda #quitter.
En todo caso, bienvenida una más a las !redeslibres si además federa con #gnusocial
On current nightly of !gnusocial I can't join remote groups with *newly* created accounts. Pre-existing accounts work fine. Any idea how to fix that, @mmn? Logs: https://hastebin.com/raw/acequcebey
@mama21mama I heard you had problems with !GNUsocial and lighttpd. I run that combination myself on both this instance and for example #quitter.es without issues.
@dredmorbius But at least you can use #tor against most instances afaik. !GNUsocial also works hard on avoiding third party servers, so no external javascript (also compatible without javascript at all) as well as locally stored media. Not even third party servers with a misleading domain name (i.e. Amazon S3 on a subdomain.service.example DNS).
I'm inherently happy to see some faces in the !fediverse here that I otherwise could only have a read-only relation with. @rysiek is one, of course, but also of course @maloki who I remember tried out what would eventually become !GNUsocial a couple of years ago!
I just click the "Reply" icon, and the !StatusNet software takes care of the rest. Maybe this will stop working when I get around to upgrading to !GNUsocial
@aral Yeah, feed as feed. They're all translatable into each other anyway given that they're Activity Streams (and !GNUsocial for example delivers both .as and .atom since there's a simple method to call for output-formatting a stream). As you probably understood, my point was more regarding public availability without authorisation. .)
@lambadalambda Yeah, @gargron instead pushes privacy by obscurity as the general direction. !GNUsocial just accepts that federation in a public, web space simply should be public. The easier it is to see how it works, the easier it is to understand how to be safe and secure.
@moonman It is horrible, I agree. There's a reason I don't say I'm a !GNUsocial developer, but rather just a maintainer. I want nothing more than to see the codebase get rewritten from scratch in a sensible language. Unfortunately, given the great body of work that the codebase is, rewriting and including all functionality that comes along with it takes a long, long ti…
!GNUsocial can import an #Atom or #RSS feed with #PubSubHubub into a timeline. Select "Settings, Mirroring, Atom or RSS feed" (I'm still on the StatusNet code, so your menu selections may be slightly different)