Getting a bot to spam out 12 posts in a minute is not the way to make me want to engage.
Is there really any scenario where a normal user should NOT be rate limited on posts or comments to some degree? Say, no more than 3 posts per minute? No more than 10 replies?
But when anyone can run an instance, you can’t control it. Someone has an instance which allows them to make as many posts as they want, and then all that content is federated to connect servers
Really though? You can implement the same limits for federated posts, and just drop the ones exceeding the rate limit. Who knows, might be frustrating for normal users that genuinely exceed the rate limits, because their stuff won’t be seen by everyone without any notice, but if they are sane it should be minimal.
The notice might still be able to be implemented though. idk how federation works exactly, but when a federated post is sent/retrieved, you can also exchange that it has been rejected. The local server of the user can then inform the user that their content has been rejected by other servers.
There are solutions for a lot of things, it just takes the time to think about & implement them, which is incredibly limited.
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Even a “normal” user needs to chill out a bit when they start reliably hitting a (for example) 3-post-a-minute threshold.
Not to suggest it isn’t a problem that needs to be solved. But from my understanding of activitypub protocol, there isn’t a way to control content federation on a per message basis, solely on allow/block instances as a whole
It’s an interesting problem to be sure. It feels like it should be possible for servers to automagically detect spam on incoming federated feeds and decline to accept spam posts.
Maybe an _actual _ useful application of LLMs
There’s already plenty of tools that do this automatically, sadly they’re very often proprietary and paid-for services. You just have to have a way to appeal false positives, because there will always be some, and, depending on how aggressive it is, sometimes a lot.
i look forward to an automated mechanism, like with image checking…
that said, the existing tools arent all that terrible, even if its after the fact.
‘purge content’ does a pretty good job of dumping data from know bad actors. and then being able blocking users/instances.
if everything was rate limited to some degree, we would manually catch these earlier, and block before the rest of the content made its way over… maybe.
Perhaps a case to be made for a federated minimum-config. If servers don’t adhere to a minimum viable contract, say meeting requirements for rate-limiting, or not requiring 2fa, or other config-level things… They become defederated.
A way of enforcing adherence to an agreed upon minimum standard of behaviour, of sorts
It would be very easy to spoof those values in a handshake though, unless you’re proposing that in the initial data exchange a remote server gets a dump of every post and computationally verifies compliance.
Federated trust is an unsolved problem in computer science because of how complex of a problem it is.
Spoofing that handshake would be a bad faith action, one that would not go unnoticed longer term. Instances with a bunch of bad faith actions will make the case for not federating with themselves.
It just has to go unnoticed long enough to spam for a few days, get defederated, delete itself, start over
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This is why Lemmy needs to keep tweaking it’s feed algorithm. I understand why many people rightly have a distaste of social media algorithm fuckery, but Lemmy doesn’t have some of the same bad incentives that an ad driven site like Reddit or twitter might have. A better algorithm will help Lemmy grow and surface interesting posts organically.
The recent feed change to boost smaller communities in 0.19 is a good start, and not showing too many posts in a row from the same community will be another welcome change.
Those numbers seem high for a normal human being. 1 a minute is even high for quality content.
I can think of a couple. For events like the NFL or some expo where you want a bunch of different topic discussion threads all at the same time. But even then, it would very limited.
flip those and double them
This is where I believe that other site did a decent job with their front page: they created filters that divided it into most popular, what’s trending, and what’s new. I like seeing posts from the variety of different communities, but I do not necessarily want to see every single post. Especially the ones from the same community, in succession. Having a way to only see the ones that are considered “popular” would be nice.
Lemmy has 3 different feeds with 8 different ways to sort them, atleast my viewer does…. What more do you want?
Curating a feed is best left to yourself, not someone who can tweak the algorithm to avoid certain posts showing up since they have an agenda.
They just said what they want. 😅 You can disagree with someone but no need to get high and mighty about it.
I use the Voyager app to browse Lemmy and it has those filters.
The problem here isn’t that Lemmy doesn’t have good enough ways to sort content; the problem is that it’s still small and doesn’t yet have enough content to sort.
The word algorithm has a bad reputation here, and there is a lot of abuse in over tuning it, but Reddit does do a better job showing me things I want while showing me bits from other communities. Even though there are 8 sorting algorithms here none of them quite satisfy my want. Scaled is a little closer but gives too many posts from the same community.
I generally sort by everything:12 hour and feel that I get a pretty good and relatively ‘clean’ cross section of the content.
I live in my happy bubble with my subbed communities.
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At the moment it’s an instance configuration.
As it should be.
Users have the ability to block users, communities, and intances (which blocks posts from appearing in our feeds).
This may be mildly infuriating, but it’s also easy to solve. OP even mentions the action that can stop this.
Nice username
Thank you! I’ve been attached to it for quite some time.
It all started with my using a sound file with this name as my startup sound on Windows 95, which I probably downloaded from some sketchy newsgroup or web site
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Consider it done
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To find communities to subscribe to.
when you subscribe to community with different sizes, the bigger ones will dominate your front page. That’s why I use “all” to get updates from populare communities, and “subscribe” for smaller communities, that only rarely reach all .
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