@gylotip
@lemmy.mlI use LibreWolf mainly because it handles fingerprinting and tracking blocking well and is open source. I also do not want Tor-related stuff because I don't want to risk going to illegal websites. So do you know any LibreWolf alternatives for mobile and Android that handle fingerprinting and tracking blocking well, automatically delete cookies and are open source?
Hello, when I search in the search bar for some words, the results are not fully related. For example, if I filter it by Posts or Comments, the results are still inaccurate.
https://www.reddit.com/r/Save3rdPartyApps/comments/14k67qt/lemmymls_admin_is_pro_chinese_government_and/
This feels like a weird conspiracy theory.
I am not advocating for ban evasion.
Reddit has implemented a powerful ban evasion filter that catches ban evaders who use alternate accounts to post on a subreddit they were banned from. Though, the same cannot be said for sitewide suspensions. While simply using a fingerprinting-blocking browser that deletes cookies every time you close the browser, you can circumvent a sitewide suspension, but evading a subreddit ban seems impossible.
So why does Reddit prevent circumventing a subreddit ban while they are okay with sitewide suspension evasions? Don't get me wrong, I respect Reddit for not being too punishing to its users, but it still feels weird that they gave moderators so much power while administrators don't use it at all. Mind explaining their choices?
Again, I am not advocating for ban evasion, and please do not circumvent a ban.
Remember the people who edited their comments where it said that they were editing their comments to protest? Then they deleted their accounts.
What if you people who mass-edited your comments edited it instead with [ Removed by Reddit ]
? Like, you edit all of your comments (not posts) with [ Removed by Reddit ]
, so if people see your comment that has lots of upvotes replaced by [ Removed by Reddit ]
, then they will think Reddit is censoring information.
This is kind of accurate because Reddit is known for removing random information and punishing people for ridiculous reasons. This feels like an effective way to protest. So what is your opinion about this idea?
Personally, I prefer Lemmy over Kbin because I hate karma and reputation points. I do not want to worry about downvotes, and Lemmy feels so fresh. I can post things that will receive lots of downvotes and not need to worry about losing karma.
The URL looks currently like this:
https://lemmy.ml/?dataType=Post&listingType=Local&page=1&sort=Active
But &sort=Active
is at the end, while &page=1
is right before. This is bad design, because &page=1
is the one that changes every time when scrolling and pressing, so put &page=1
at the end of the URL please:
https://lemmy.ml/?dataType=Post&listingType=Local&sort=Active&page=1
See? It looks so much better.