Apologies if you experienced any issues accessing the site over the last 30 minutes or so!
I was attempting to trim down a database table which has been a massive storage hog. The command being run caused a massive load on the server as it attempted to essentially truncate the table with set parameters (i.e, leave the most recent 100k records).
But, we're back. I have to fix the modlog again, but that's a small issue I really don't care about at the present time. I'll get to it eventually.
If you notice any issues, please let me know!
And as a bonus, this is how much space a single table was using (we're only on a 20GB drive right now)
Like other instances, we've just updated our instance to 0.18.2 in order to help mitigate the risks of the XSS vulnerability.
If you notice any issues, please comment below!
Cheers!
https://piped.bleh.au/watch?v=69QubPzTjkw
An alternative privacy-friendly YouTube frontend which is efficient by design.
If you've been living under a rock for the last few days, you mightn't have heard about Threads. Basically, Threads is another Twitter-style social media platform, heavily integrated with Instagram (Meta). From what I understand (and I'm happy to be corrected), Meta plans on integrating Threads to the ActivityPub protocol in the future. ActivityPub (colloquially known as Federation) is how services like Lemmy, Kbin, Mastodon, Pixelfed, etc, integrate and can show posts/images from a remote instance on the local instance. In fact, it's probably how most of you are reading this (as we're a small server with less than 100 users)!
The way I see it, is it is similar to a company buyout. The company that's purchasing the smaller company/competitor reassures the clientele of the smaller company that "Nothing will change. We want to embrace how this company operates and make the parent company like this one!". Seems harmless, right? Wrong. I've seen it happen before with companies in Australia (and globally). It never turns out this way. It pretty much always works out for the worst, and ends up in pissed off clientele and a husk of a great company (I'm looking at you, iiNet... thanks, TPG for ruining it).
While not the same to what I believe will happen to the Fediverse should Meta/big-tech be able to Federate, it's similar. Microsoft said it best themselves (as found by the U.S. DoJ); and this is what I believe we'll end up with if we allow federation with Meta/big-tech. EEE (Embrace the technology (so, federate with the existing network), Extend the technology by developing PROPRIETARY extensions to the ActivityPub protocol (so, for example, Threads has a new feature that won't be compatible or made available with the Open Source ActivityPub protocol), and finally Extinguish the Open Source ActivityPub protocol by marginalising existing Federation hosts because the new proprietary features they've added to ActivityPub are either exorbitantly expensive for small instances (like us) to use, or by simply locking the features up as "Trade Secrets" and never releasing them to the rest of the open network, thus killing all other instances because they have the largest share of users, and it has become the de-facto platform for everyone to use.
We have preemptively defederated from threads.net in the event they activate the ActivityPub protocol within Threads. Mainly for the reason above, but also because it has grown ridiculously fast overnight, and I don't believe the content on there at this present time is what I want people to see when they come to my Fediverse instances.
I want to be clear; it's not JUST Threads/Meta we should be concerned about. If, for example, Apple created a social media platform and it grew this ridiculously quickly overnight, I'd defederate it, too. Similar could be said with Twitter. If they decided to jump-on-in to the Fediverse, I'd defederate it as well, simply because Musk is nuts and his mentality towards technology mostly screams Embrace, Extend and Extinguish. And I don't like the content on Twitter.
Many other instances aren't speaking up about Threads or what they plan on doing regarding Federating with them. They're staying quiet. I'm not sure why, but if a small server like us can be vocal about it, why can't they?
That's my stance on it. It's not my only issue and sole reason why I'm defederating from Threads.net, but it's the main, major reason. I'm happy to hear your thoughts on it! Let me know what you think.
@iKill101
@lemmy.bleh.au