this post was submitted on 08 Apr 2024
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I realise this is a known issue and that lemmy.world isn't the only instance that does this. Also, I'm aware that there are other things affecting federation. But I'm seeing some things not federate, and can't help thinking that things would be going smoother if all the output from the biggest lemmy instance wasn't 50% spam.

Hopefully this doesn't seem like I'm shit-stirring, or trying to make the Issue I'm interested in more important than other Issues. It's something I mention occasionally, but it might be a bit abstract if you're not the admin of another instance.

The red terminal is a tail -f of the nginx log on my server. The green terminal is outputting some details from the ActivityPub JSON containing the Announce. You should be able to see the correlation between the lines in the nginx log, and lines from the activity, and that everything is duplicated.

This was generated by me commenting on an old post, using content that spawns an answer from a couple of bots, and then me upvoting the response. (so CREATE, CREATE, LIKE, is being announced as CREATE, CREATE, CREATE, CREATE, LIKE, LIKE). If you scale that up to every activity by every user, you'll appreciate that LW is creating a lot of work for anyone else in the Fediverse, just to filter out the duplicates.

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[–] finickydesert@lemmy.ml -4 points 7 months ago (2 children)

I'm curious why there isn't (as far as I'm aware at the moment) to prohibit the ability to respond to a post 3+ years ago

[–] xnx@slrpnk.net 8 points 7 months ago

Why would there be? Old threads can be very useful after years and discussion can continue especially with software related threads. I find lots of bug fixes for stuff on reddit years ago that gets updated by a single person posting years later with a fix for something on the subreddits that dont annoyingly auto archive “old” posts

[–] Die4Ever@programming.dev 3 points 7 months ago

Being able to respond to old posts is a good thing, like classic forums. I always hated that Reddit didn't allow you to do that, and Reddit also didn't have sort options for New Comments or Active.

Imagine if someone made a post about a tech issue, it ranked high on Google results, lots of people in the comments with the same issue, and you found the solution, but the post was too old to reply to.