[-] Emotet@slrpnk.net 1 points 17 hours ago

Indeed it does, I was talking about adding a checkbox tagged "Only transfer blocked users" instead of having to click through some menus.

[-] Emotet@slrpnk.net 31 points 1 day ago

We have to vote for the people who will admit to that and get rid of them. The U.S. is going to have to choose between a leader who tries to install good people to run the government and one who intends to install people bent on dismantling the government and giving loyalty to the leader alone.

I largely share your thoughts. I honestly expected Biden to at least be prepared enough to counter the usual Trump tactics of making things up and using strong words to impress his base while deflecting blame or critical questions.

Instead, we got Trump basically having free rein to appear strong with simple (and wrong) answers to complex questions, twisting the truth to support his positions and straight up lying and deflecting when finally confronted with something.

I'm not a big fan of Biden, but IMO he's the obvious, rational choice out of two candidates way past their prime - if you're into rationality over the antics of a con artist.

But this isn't a fair fight, and Biden isn't the showman Trump managed to be today. Biden was barely audible and mostly on the defensive while appearing weak, Trump was the opposite of that. I can't imagine any Trump voter switching teams after the debate, but I can image more than a few more emotionally motivated democrats second guessing their choice.

[-] Emotet@slrpnk.net 1 points 1 day ago

Sure, the code is completely client-side, simply clone it. If you're running into CORS problems due to the file:// scheme Origin of opening a local file, simply host it as a local temporary server with something like python -m http.server .

This is due to the two ways most instances validate Cross-Origin requests:


  • Sending Access-Control-Allow-Origin: * (allow all hosts)
  • Dynamically putting your Origin into the Origin header of the response to your requests by the backend

file:// URLs will result in a null or file:// Origin which can't be authorized via the second option, therefore the need to sometimes host the application via (local) webserver.

27
submitted 1 day ago by Emotet@slrpnk.net to c/dach@feddit.de

@elvith@feddit.org und ich haben mehr oder weniger unabhängig zwei Web Apps entwickelt , welche beide bis auf gewisse Extrafeatures den Accountumzug so einfach wie möglich gestalten sollten:

https://stablenarwhal.github.io/Lemmy-Userdata-Migration/

Features:

  • Export user data from any Lemmy instance (>=v0.19)
  • Download user data as a text file
  • Modify user data, e.g. to add or remove followed users/communites (Example in Wiki)
    • "display_name" ​
    • "bio" ​
    • "avatar" ​
    • "banner" ​
    • "matrix_id" ​
    • "bot_account" ​
    • "settings" ​
    • "followed_communities" ​
    • "saved_posts" ​
    • "saved_comments" ​
    • "blocked_communities" ​
    • "blocked_users" ​
    • "blocked_instances"
  • Transfer user data to the target account on the target instance

https://elvith-de.github.io/lemmy-migration/

Features:

  • Login and export settings from any Lemmy instance (e.g. feddit.de)
  • Optionally: Find local communities on the target instance that match followed communities
  • Optionally: Backup your settings to a file (can be imported on any Lemmy instance in your profile)
  • Login and import settings to any Lemmy instance (e.g. feddit.org)
[-] Emotet@slrpnk.net 5 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

The whole point of this being a web app is to make it as easy as possible for the user to download/modify/transfer their user data. LASIM is a traditional app the user has to download and install, similar to a script this web app was developed to replace due to being too difficult to use for some users.

The import functionality targeted by this API is additive and my app features a built-in editor to add, modify or remove information as the user sees fit. To achieve your stated goal, you'd have to remove anything except the blocked_users entries before importing, which my app supports, I added a wiki entry explaining the workflow in more Detail.

I may add options to modify the exported data in some ways via a simple checkbox in the future, but I wouldn't count on it. I'm always open for pull requests!

[-] Emotet@slrpnk.net 14 points 1 day ago
  • "display_name" ​
  • "bio" ​
  • "avatar" ​
  • "banner" ​
  • "matrix_id" ​
  • "bot_account" ​
  • "settings" ​
  • "followed_communities" ​
  • "saved_posts" ​
  • "saved_comments" ​
  • "blocked_communities" ​
  • "blocked_users" ​
  • "blocked_instances"
[-] Emotet@slrpnk.net 2 points 1 day ago

The export/import functionality is, yes. This implementation uses the same API endpoints, but the main reason for this existing:

An instance I was on slowly died, starting with the frontend (default web UI). At least at the time, no client implemented the export/import functionality, so I wrote a simple script in Bash to download the user data, if the backend still works.

Running a script can still be a challenge to some users, so I wrote a web application with the same functionality.

It's a bit redundant if we're talking about regularly working instances, but can be of use if the frontend isn't available for some reason.

[-] Emotet@slrpnk.net 26 points 1 day ago

The export/import functionality is, yes. This implementation uses the same API endpoints, but the main reason for this existing:

An instance I was on slowly died, starting with the frontend (default web UI). At least at the time, no client implemented the export/import functionality, so I wrote a simple script in Bash to download the user data, if the backend still works. Running a script can still be a challenge to some users, so I wrote a web application with the same functionality. It's a bit redundant if we're talking about regularly working instances, but can be of use if the frontend isn't available for some reason.

87
submitted 2 days ago* (last edited 1 day ago) by Emotet@slrpnk.net to c/fediverse@lemmy.world

cross-posted from: https://slrpnk.net/post/10823519

So I wrote a little web app that allows a user to move their user data, like settings and subscribed/banned communities, from one account/instance to another.

It runs completely client-side, but is hosted on GitHub for the moment. Maybe it'll be of some use!

Features:

  • Don't trust me or GitHub? Clone the project and host it yourself or run it locally (Example in Wiki)
  • Export user data from any Lemmy instance (>=v0.19)
  • Download user data as a text file
  • Modify user data, e.g. to add or remove followed users/communites (Example in Wiki)
    • "display_name" ​
    • "bio" ​
    • "avatar" ​
    • "banner" ​
    • "matrix_id" ​
    • "bot_account" ​
    • "settings" ​
    • "followed_communities" ​
    • "saved_posts" ​
    • "saved_comments" ​
    • "blocked_communities" ​
    • "blocked_users" ​
    • "blocked_instances"
  • Transfer user data to the target account on the target instance
[-] Emotet@slrpnk.net 5 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

Good call, I'll add some explanations, kinda forgot about those.

EDIT: Done.

49
submitted 5 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) by Emotet@slrpnk.net to c/lemmy_support@lemmy.ml

So I wrote a little web app that allows a user to move their user data, like settings and subscribed/banned communities, from one account/instance to another.

It runs completely client-side, but is hosted on GitHub for the moment. Maybe it'll be of some use!

Features:

  • Export user data from any Lemmy instance (>=v0.19)
  • Download user data as a text file
  • Modify user data in the browser, e.g. to add or remove followed instances
  • Transfer user data to the target account on the target instance
1
submitted 5 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) by Emotet@slrpnk.net to c/main@feddit.org

An dieser Stelle reposte ich auch auf der neuen deutschen Main-Instanz zwei einfache Wege, um seinen User (Settings und abonnierte/geblockte Communities) von einer Lemmy Instanz auf eine andere umzuziehen, beispielsweise von feddit.de auf feddit.org, von meinem ursprünglichen Post unter feddit.de/c/main ( https://alexandrite.app/feddit.de/post/11325409)

Update: Ich habe für die erhöhte Userfreundlichkeit noch eine Web Applikation erstellt, welche den Prozess so einfach wie möglich gestalten soll. Zu finden hier:

https://stablenarwhal.github.io/Lemmy-Userdata-Migration/

Features:

  • Export user data from any Lemmy instance (>=v0.19)
  • Download user data as a text file
  • Modify user data in the browser, e.g. to add or remove followed instances
  • Transfer user data to the target account on the target instance

Update 2: @elvith@feddit.org hat auch eine Web Applikation mit ähnlicher Funktionalität entwickelt. Zu finden hier:

https://elvith-de.github.io/lemmy-migration/

Basic features:

  • Login and export settings from feddit.de (or any other instance)
  • Optionally save exported data to a local file
  • Login and import settings to feddit.org (or any other instance)

Planned future feature:

  • optionally analyze joined communities and cross reference to local communities on target instance and offer to add those while the migration

Weg 1, falls man noch einen Browser mit aktiver Session auf feddit.de hat:

Lemmy bietet seit Version 0.19 eine Funktion an, um die user data zu ex- und importieren. Das geht normalerweise über einen Button in den Settings des Webinterfaces, das geht aktuell bei feddit.de nicht.

Aber der zugrundeliegende API-Aufruf funktioniert noch, solange man noch mit einem Browser auf feddit.de eingeloggt ist:

  1. Man gehe auf https://feddit.de/api/v3/user/export_settings und speichert die zurückgegebene Datei als irgendwas.json
  2. Man nehme einen (neuen) Account auf einer stabilen Instanz der Wahl, gehe auf /settings und lade irgendwas.json über den Import-Button hoch.
  3. Voilà, man genieße die neue Instanz.

Das funktioniert mit jeder Instanz >=0.19, man muss lediglich das "feddit.de" in der URL ersetzen. Und wenn das Webinterface funktioniert, geht das auch über den Export- Button in den Settings.


Weg 2:

Für die Leute, die keine offene Browser Session haben, hier ein kleines, aber funktionales Bash Script, welches im Ausführungsverzeichnis eine myFedditUserData.json erstellt, welche bei anderen Instanzen importiert werden kann.

Anforderungen:

  • Linux/Mac OS X /Windows mit WSL
  • jq installiert (Unter Ubuntu/Debian/Mint z.B. per sudo apt install -y jq

Anleitung:

  • Folgendes Script unter einem beliebigen Namen mit .sh Endung abspeichern, z.B. getMyFedditUserData.sh
  • Script in beliebigen Textprogramm öffnen, Username/Mail und Passwort ausfüllen (optional Instanz ändern)
  • Terminal im Ordner des Scripts öffnen und chmod +x getMyFedditUserData.sh ausführen (Namen eventuell anpassen)
  • ./getMyFedditUserData.sh im Terminal eingeben
  • Nun liegt im Ordner neben dem Script eine frische myFedditUserData.json

Anmerkung: Das Script ist recht simpel, es wird ein JWT Bearer Token angefragt und als Header bei dem GET Aufruf von https://feddit.de/api/v3/user/export_settings mitgegeben. Wer kein Linux/Mac OS X zur Verfügung hat, kann den Ablauf mit anderen Mitteln nachstellen.

Das Script:

#!/bin/bash

# Basic login script for Lemmy API

# CHANGE THESE VALUES
my_instance="https://feddit.de"			# e.g. https://feddit.nl
my_username=""			# e.g. freamon
my_password=""			# e.g. hunter2

########################################################

# Lemmy API version
API="api/v3"

########################################################

# Turn off history substitution (avoid errors with ! usage)
set +H

########################################################

# Login
login() {
	end_point="user/login"
	json_data="{\"username_or_email\":\"$my_username\",\"password\":\"$my_password\"}"

	url="$my_instance/$API/$end_point"

	curl -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d "$json_data" "$url"
}

# Get userdata as JSON
getUserData() {
	end_point="user/export_settings"

	url="$my_instance/$API/$end_point"

	curl -H "Authorization: Bearer ${JWT}" "$url"
}

JWT=$(login | jq -r '.jwt')

printf 'JWT Token: %s\n' "$JWT"

getUserData | jq > myFedditUserData.json

@elvith@feddit.org hat mein Script auch in PowerShell nachgebaut, welches unter Windows ohne WSL auskommt: https://gist.github.com/elvith-de/89107061661e001df659d7a7d413092b

# CHANGE THESE VALUES
$my_instance="https://feddit.de" # e.g. https://feddit.nl
$target_file = "C:\Temp\export.json"

########################################################
#Ask user for username and password
$credentials = Get-Credential -Message "Logindata for $my_instance" -Title "Login"

$my_username= $credentials.UserName
$my_password= $credentials.GetNetworkCredential().Password

# Lemmy API version
$API="api/v3"

# Login
function Get-AuthToken() {
    $end_point="user/login"
    $json_data= @{
        "username_or_email" = $my_username;
        "password" = $my_password
    } | ConvertTo-Json

    $url="$my_instance/$API/$end_point"

    (Invoke-RestMethod -Headers @{"Content-Type" = "application/json"} -Body $json_data -Method Post -Uri $url).JWT
}

# Get userdata as JSON
function Get-UserData() {
    $end_point="user/export_settings"

    $url="$my_instance/$API/$end_point"

    Invoke-RestMethod -Headers @{"Authorization"="Bearer $($JWT)"} -Method Get -Uri $url
}

$JWT= Get-AuthToken

Write-Host "Got JWT Token: $JWT"

Write-Host "Exporting data to $target_file"
Get-UserData | ConvertTo-Json | Out-File -FilePath $target_file
[-] Emotet@slrpnk.net 21 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago)

An dieser Stelle reposte ich nochmal zwei einfache Wege, um seinen User (Settings und abonnierte/geblockte Communities) von einer Lemmy Instanz auf eine andere umzuziehen, beispielsweise von feddit.de auf feddit.org, von meinem ursprünglichen Post unter feddit.de/c/main ( https://alexandrite.app/feddit.de/post/11325409)


Weg 1, falls man noch einen Browser mit aktiver Session auf feddit.de hat:

Lemmy bietet seit Version 0.19 eine Funktion an, um die user data zu ex- und importieren. Das geht normalerweise über einen Button in den Settings des Webinterfaces, das geht aktuell bei feddit.de nicht.

Aber der zugrundeliegende API-Aufruf funktioniert noch, solange man noch mit einem Browser auf feddit.de eingeloggt ist:

  1. Man gehe auf https://feddit.de/api/v3/user/export_settings und speichert die zurückgegebene Datei als irgendwas.json
  2. Man nehme einen (neuen) Account auf einer stabilen Instanz der Wahl, gehe auf /settings und lade irgendwas.json über den Import-Button hoch.
  3. Voilà, man genieße die neue Instanz.

Das funktioniert mit jeder Instanz >=0.19, man muss lediglich das "feddit.de" in der URL ersetzen. Und wenn das Webinterface funktioniert, geht das auch über den Export- Button in den Settings.


Weg 2:

Für die Leute, die keine offene Browser Session haben, hier ein kleines, aber funktionales Bash Script, welches im Ausführungsverzeichnis eine myFedditUserData.json erstellt, welche bei anderen Instanzen importiert werden kann.

Anforderungen:

  • Linux/Mac OS X /Windows mit WSL
  • jq installiert (Unter Ubuntu/Debian/Mint z.B. per sudo apt install -y jq

Anleitung:

  • Folgendes Script unter einem beliebigen Namen mit .sh Endung abspeichern, z.B. getMyFedditUserData.sh
  • Script in beliebigen Textprogramm öffnen, Username/Mail und Passwort ausfüllen (optional Instanz ändern)
  • Terminal im Ordner des Scripts öffnen und chmod +x getMyFedditUserData.sh ausführen (Namen eventuell anpassen)
  • ./getMyFedditUserData.sh im Terminal eingeben
  • Nun liegt im Ordner neben dem Script eine frische myFedditUserData.json

Anmerkung: Das Script ist recht simpel, es wird ein JWT Bearer Token angefragt und als Header bei dem GET Aufruf von https://feddit.de/api/v3/user/export_settings mitgegeben. Wer kein Linux/Mac OS X zur Verfügung hat, kann den Ablauf mit anderen Mitteln nachstellen.

Das Script:

#!/bin/bash

# Basic login script for Lemmy API

# CHANGE THESE VALUES
my_instance="https://feddit.de"			# e.g. https://feddit.nl
my_username=""			# e.g. freamon
my_password=""			# e.g. hunter2

########################################################

# Lemmy API version
API="api/v3"

########################################################

# Turn off history substitution (avoid errors with ! usage)
set +H

########################################################

# Login
login() {
	end_point="user/login"
	json_data="{\"username_or_email\":\"$my_username\",\"password\":\"$my_password\"}"

	url="$my_instance/$API/$end_point"

	curl -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d "$json_data" "$url"
}

# Get userdata as JSON
getUserData() {
	end_point="user/export_settings"

	url="$my_instance/$API/$end_point"

	curl -H "Authorization: Bearer ${JWT}" "$url"
}

JWT=$(login | jq -r '.jwt')

printf 'JWT Token: %s\n' "$JWT"

getUserData | jq > myFedditUserData.json

@elvith@feddit.org hat mein Script auch in PowerShell nachgebaut, welches unter Windows ohne WSL auskommt: https://gist.github.com/elvith-de/89107061661e001df659d7a7d413092b

# CHANGE THESE VALUES
$my_instance="https://feddit.de" # e.g. https://feddit.nl
$target_file = "C:\Temp\export.json"

########################################################
#Ask user for username and password
$credentials = Get-Credential -Message "Logindata for $my_instance" -Title "Login"

$my_username= $credentials.UserName
$my_password= $credentials.GetNetworkCredential().Password

# Lemmy API version
$API="api/v3"

# Login
function Get-AuthToken() {
    $end_point="user/login"
    $json_data= @{
        "username_or_email" = $my_username;
        "password" = $my_password
    } | ConvertTo-Json

    $url="$my_instance/$API/$end_point"

    (Invoke-RestMethod -Headers @{"Content-Type" = "application/json"} -Body $json_data -Method Post -Uri $url).JWT
}

# Get userdata as JSON
function Get-UserData() {
    $end_point="user/export_settings"

    $url="$my_instance/$API/$end_point"

    Invoke-RestMethod -Headers @{"Authorization"="Bearer $($JWT)"} -Method Get -Uri $url
}

$JWT= Get-AuthToken

Write-Host "Got JWT Token: $JWT"

Write-Host "Exporting data to $target_file"
Get-UserData | ConvertTo-Json | Out-File -FilePath $target_file
[-] Emotet@slrpnk.net 50 points 1 week ago

Misleading title.

In the string of images uploaded online, we get a look at file repositories, a rough map of the proposed Moon location, and shots of some early conceptual images and set pieces. As the story goes, CDPR originally intended for the Moon to be a featured location in the base game but recognised that it was too ambitious a goal, so they cut the content and instead decided to use it for an expansion – which ultimately never surfaced.

Cyberpunk 2077’s development has officially ended, so there’s no chance this will ever see the light of day.

17
  1. Install the Userscripts extension for Safari, open the app and go through the setup as instructed by the app. Don't forget to activate the extension for Safari.
  2. After fully setting up the Userscripts extension, go to the TwitchAdSolutions git repo and click on userscript next to video-swap-new. You can play around with vaft as well, but video-swap-new works way better on iOS in my experience. This script replaces ads with a lower resolution stream.
  3. Install the script by opening the Userscripts extension in Safari while the script you opened in step 2 is the active tab and clicking the Install button.
  4. Go to twitch.tv and enjoy your ad-free experience.

Optional:

  • When you have the Twitch App installed, Safari displays the annoying "open in App" Bar on top of the website. This also leaks into Fullscreen Mode. To get rid of it, uninstall the Twitch App and optionally install another extension to remove those Bars altogether, like Unsmartifier.
  • Want 7TV/BTTV/FFZ features like Emotes or a customizable Twitch Experience? Install the FFZ userscript, reload twitch.tv and configure your experience and/or install Add-ons like 7TV Emotes by clicking the new icon top right.
37
submitted 2 weeks ago by Emotet@slrpnk.net to c/reddit@lemmy.world

Using reddit without an account is a pain nowadays, especially with any commercial VPN. There are ways around that:

Some of you may known the rather short-lived Libreddit, an awesome frontend for Reddit that got struck down by its success.

Redlib is a (still working) fork of Libreddit with a few instances. Due to reddits API Limits, it's not very practical to rely on one instance.

A quite elegant solution is the Automatic Redlib Quota & Error Redirector userscript. Once installed, most Redlib errors are automatically detected and your request gets redirected to another instance. This results in an excellent user experience, altough some instances can be a bit slow if you're trying to access media.

The list of available Redlib instances the script uses gets updated quite frequently. The script also works nicely with redirect plugins, e.g. this one for Firefox, if you want to automatically redirect all Reddit URLs to Redlib.

37
submitted 4 weeks ago by Emotet@slrpnk.net to c/dach@feddit.de
[-] Emotet@slrpnk.net 92 points 1 month ago

Well, this tells us that more privacy minded people with a background or interest in technology tend to be more present/engaging on Fediverse platforms. Not really surprising.

view more: next ›

Emotet

joined 2 months ago