And saw a bunch of posts about the third party apps closing down, and lots of negativity about that whole fiasco.

… And I realized I hadn’t been there for a week… And frankly didn’t miss it. I am really loving the beehaw (and Lemmy as a whole) community. Thanks for being open, welcoming, responsive, engaging, and just generally nice people. I’m happy to be here. :)

    •  Andreas   ( @Andreas@feddit.dk ) 
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      1 year ago

      I believe it’s ban logs that are federated, not the bans themselves, but I don’t have any proof. Could someone running a personal instance test this by banning a remote user and see if they can still interact with other remote instances?

      Note that if a user is banned by their home instance, it’s expected that they can’t interact with any remote instance either, as all of their posts will pass through their home instance first.

      • If Beehaw bans from the site someone that is on a remote instance, that account can no longer interact with any Beehaw communities. If Beehaw bans from the community someone that is on a remote instance, that account can no longer interact in that community.

          • Ban logs do federate but the effects aren’t in the way you describe. Otherwise, someone could just ban everyone over night by making their own little server, that’d be uh, quite chaotic to say the least? Thankfully, this is not how bans work through federation.

          •  pushka   ( @pushka@beehaw.org ) 
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            21 year ago

            It’s probably up to the community admins to ignore or take external bans into consideration; like different countries and Interpol

            If you have low resources you could copy ban lists to keep spam out (though that could be used to attack random users , though big communities’ ban lists may have more reputation - like beehaw is a big established community ~ ?