They are, I get results. My worry is they are not aggregated/unified. Some lemmy instances don't have 'lemmy' in their name, and I'm not sure if they would show up in a search "X + lemmy".
Spzi
I'm worried this will not be enough in the long run.
Imagine Meta provides more original content, a higher user base, more engagement, more activity. That alone would make it interesting for many other users, further increasing their relative attractivity.
Additionally, they could invest in the codebase, and implement some of the community's dream features, some nice mod tools, search engine discoverability and whatnot. On a fork which lives on their instances, of course. Services which work if you federate with them.
They have the resources to rase the stakes higher and higher. The incentives are objective, real, advantages for users, communitites, mods and admins. Isn't it only a question of time / stake height until significant parts of the fediverse choose to cooperate for various reasons?
Freedom of the press never extended to the front lines of an active war zone.
Autonomous reporters (even if they only are that, which isn't safe to assume) wandering around on battlefields can cause all kinds of issues for everyone involved.
I subscribed, but it says subscribe pending.
Have that too with some instances. Being pending should already suffice to make the content visible.
Try the searches again, do yours now show the same as mine?
the largest assumption you are making is that the OP does business with the EU. If they do not, they are truly out of the jurisdiction of GDPR
GDPR applies to American enterprises if they process personal data of EU citizens.
If you serve a website which is accessible to EU citizens, and that site collects personal data or allows users to enter personal data, GDPR most probably applies to you. IANAL.
Based on your replies to other comments, it seems you don't see how the GDPR, or GDPR fines, could have any effect on US companies.
https://www.enforcementtracker.com/
Sort the list by fines, and you find US companies paying whopping amounts. Many affect their EU presence (such as Meta Platforms Ireland Limited), but others don't (such as Meta Platforms, Inc.).
Ask yourself if these giants were just too nice to give in, or if they were too poor to hire a lawyer.
If you think both options are unrealistic, maybe the GDPR does have an effect even on US companies.
Interesting, I was afraid of that. Adds to the unreliability :D
Are you by any chance not subscribed to [email protected]? With how federation and content pulling works, that could be an explanation.
Can you share an example where it works?
The above link only yields results from [email protected]. So in a way, it is what you asked for.
This query shows me your post as the first result.
This query shows me my comment as the first result.
Yes it is unreliable, but it's the best I know to (sometimes) do the job. I would also appreciate a better solution, that's how I came to this thread.
It seems the general search is meant to do that. But it doesn't, at least not well.
Here is an example, which should find your post, but does not (for me).
The core insight is to use the 'community' dropdown. Helped me find some things, but as this example shows, does not work reliably. I could not find your post by searching for full title, title parts, body parts.
That’s why you sometimes see people downvoted into oblivion, simply for stating something which is true, within a community that is deluded about that given thing. Whether the votes accurately represent the value of the content, depends entirely on who sees it.
Even in that example the system works as described and intended. That community deems "true statements" bad content, hence they downvote it.
It is not an objective measure, but reflects how much a given community values a specific content, how much they find it relevant.
Once a project is forked away, you no longer have any control at all.
What does that mean in the context of lemmy's license? As I understand it, everyone is allowed to fork it away, but not allowed to change the license. Which allows everyone to fork it further away or back.
I don't understand what control means in this context. Isn't it a thing people can just modify and use, now and for all future?
It's the first and only lemmy app working on my old 2015 android phone.
Great to have backwards compatible options. I also like it :)