Lemmy.world is temporarily disabling open signups and moving to an application-required signup process, due to ongoing issues with malicious bot accounts.

We know this is a major step to take, but we believe that it’s the right one for both us and our community right now.

We’re working on a better long-term technical solution to these bots, but that will take time to create, test, and verify that it doesn’t cause any problems with federation and how our users use our site, and we’d rather make sure we get it right than have a site that’s broken.

We’re making this change on 28 Aug 2023, and don’t have a specific timeline for how long registrations will require an application, but we will post an update once our new anti-abuse measures are in place and working.

Take care, LW Team

  • 520@kbin.social
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    10 months ago

    Didn’t say blackmail the fediverse. I’m saying blackmail the company trying to spread CSAM.

    Ohhhh okay. Gotcha. There is one tiny problem with this.

    On the Dark Web, you treat your identity like your password, you never give it out under any circumstances. And the norms in black markets reflect this, including the norms of transactions.

    That means the seller doesn’t know who the buyer is, and the buyer doesn’t know who the seller is, and the exchanging of such information is a serious fuck up. Sellers don’t want to know, as such knowledge can be a vehicle for the feds to charge them with a crime.

    Now sure, a bad seller could turn around and blackmail the company, but only if that information gets leaked. This can be surprisingly easy to do, as there are avenues of info leakage that will catch out newbies, but anyone actually experienced with dark net transfers knows the score: no screen sharing, vet all screenshots carefully, don’t use your real address for deliveries, don’t use your home (or work) connection for the transaction, etc.

    And again, you don’t derail a movement. You try to own it if you really care.

    Don’t know what you mean by own here. Control? Maybe but that depends on your own position and what benefits you.

    But even then, it’s not worth it. XMPP has been “competing” for far longer and likely had more success up front than Lemmy or Kbin.

    XMPP is an IM standard, is it not? What that does and what Lemmy/Kbin do are very different.

    • pjhenry1216@kbin.social
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      10 months ago

      Are you suggesting messaging doesn’t have dominant players or that Google didn’t integrate with XMPP and then eventually break compatibility and some folks argue set back XMPP in mindshare and marketshare.

      XMPP is essentially an open standard where you can host your own relays. The concept was to fight against iMessage and Google Chat and Blackberry, etc. It was just as popular as lemmy/Kbin is now. Hell, Mastodon dwarfs Lemmy as a whole and isn’t under attack.

      There’s just no real evidence this is a concerted effort to ruin the fediverse for corporate gain. It’s much cheaper and more profitable to exploit it. It just isn’t worth it right now. Meta sees an opportunity but mainly because it wanted to try and exploit Xwitter’s current state. That’s why it’s not even on the fediverse yet. It’s not that concerned.

      Occam’s Razor.

      Edit: added clarification (emphasis added to highlight the change).