So the images, video, etc isn’t cached here, it’s just text and links? Sites generally aren’t liable for what is on the other side of links, they just have to remove the link if they are notified by the copyright holder that it’s infringing their rights.
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I feel like there should be a major distinction between caching remote content and hosting that content yourself. Does Cloudflare get in trouble every time the FBI seizes a site that used Cloudflare routing, CDN, or caching? Not as far as I’m aware.
But the content in question isn’t hosted on lemmy.world…?
I don’t understand how lemmy world has removed them, aren’t those all communities on different servers? How is this our problem?
tcj@lemmy.worldto
Fediverse@lemmy.world•Search "Lemmy" on the play store and the official Reddit app shows up 6th lolEnglish
1·3 years agoTheir core products meaning search and email, sure. Everything else is on the chopping block and randomly changes all the time.
Remember when they bought Nest and literally bricked everyone’s thermostats? Tasks / reminders / whatever gets completely reworked every other year. They went through a chat phase where they released half a dozen different, incompatible chat apps, and also wrote a chat sub-system into every other app they had.
They’re lunatics. If all they want to do is search and email, just do that, don’t waste time and consumer patience branching out into all these random things they’ll drop support for in two years.
tcj@lemmy.worldto
Fediverse@lemmy.world•The BBC on Mastodon: experimenting with distributed and decentralised social mediaEnglish
651·3 years agoBecause then someone else would be able to control and censor their content. Really every business should make their own server to ensure that they’re the ones fully in control of their content - this is the entire point of federation.
tcj@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Reddit is taking control of large subreddits that are still protesting its API changesEnglish
31·3 years agowhat did these protests change so far?
They pushed people to other platforms.
tcj@lemmy.worldto
Fediverse@lemmy.world•Search "Lemmy" on the play store and the official Reddit app shows up 6th lolEnglish
82·3 years agoThey’re one of the least reliable companies out there. Every other product gets cancelled within 2 years, and they’re constantly making major redesigns for no reason.
tcj@lemmy.worldto
Boost For Lemmy@lemmy.world•as of today, boost for reddit is completely dead to me.English
4·3 years agoI really like Mastodon. The whole federated nature of it guarantees that the content you want to see won’t be censored or hidden by the algorithm.
It will only get better as more people use it.
tcj@lemmy.worldto
Fediverse@lemmy.world•Mastodon has hit 2 million active users today!English
3·3 years agoI think there’s a lot of value to the algorithm, but it needs to be based on real engagement rather than arbitrary bullshit that a soulless corporation wants to promote.
I subscribe to a lot of people, but not all of their content is worth seeing. Having it curated down to just the stuff that’s actually popular can be nice. It’s definitely tricky to make that work in a fair and useful way though.

If they want to air on the safe side, as they appear to here, they can just auto-approve any takedown request. Just as robust a legal protection, while still allowing more content to be online.