this post was submitted on 20 Feb 2024
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Work Reform
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A place to discuss positive changes that can make work more equitable, and to vent about current practices. We are NOT against work; we just want the fruits of our labor to be recognized better.
Our Philosophies:
- All workers must be paid a living wage for their labor.
- Income inequality is the main cause of lower living standards.
- Workers must join together and fight back for what is rightfully theirs.
- We must not be divided and conquered. Workers gain the most when they focus on unifying issues.
Our Goals
- Higher wages for underpaid workers.
- Better worker representation, including but not limited to unions.
- Better and fewer working hours.
- Stimulating a massive wave of worker organizing in the United States and beyond.
- Organizing and supporting political causes and campaigns that put workers first.
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Any chance you can expand on that slightly? I’m fine being wrong, but this doesn’t offer much information.
Just linking to rxxxit doesn't require the API, so no API costs.
There is no flood warning because the individual lemmy user viewing the linked content uses their own IP address.
i.reddit is a web server just like any other and if you have a link to a file there, and it is not otherwise secured, you can embed a link or reference to it in any HTML.
You don't realize this likely because you browse using a mobile app and imagine that reddit is something other than just a website that can be treated and linked to like any other website.
I browse exclusively from a browser, however, I am nearly entirely unfamiliar with how the web works. I’ve pieced together that Reddit was using Imgur’s API and was charged heavily for its use. I’m guessing based on another comment that Imgur required referred requests to go through their API? And Reddit has no such protections for some reason? That about right?
There's not much to expand on. There's no mechanism here for linking to someone else's content to cost money, so it doesn't.
I realize now that there’s somehow a disconnect in thought between linking content on a content aggregator and expecting users to load it. It’s my mistake, I lack the vocabulary to communicate that properly.
I'm pretty sure it's less that, rather you are memeing your username for the lulz.
No, I’m just asking a question and receiving (mostly) answers from people without any interest in answering it. I did get a couple of proper answers, which was nice. An audience of 20 isn’t enticing enough to troll.
I know I am the one that answered it.
And you are trolling and now you're blocked.
Rude, but I still sincerely appreciate your answer, my overly cautious friend.
There's no mechanism for this. Sure, they could track the referer (if it's even set - Lemmy apps probably wouldn't bother, browsers can decide not to as well)
But then what? They send a bill to the Lemmy site? Which would be your instance, not the one where it was posted... Which you could then laugh off and post for content
What you're describing doesn't exist, otherwise I could start my own host service and spam posts to Reddit and charge them whatever I want. I could even go to my own content
Now, let's say they did want to do something like this. They could send a "not allowed" picture instead of what you asked for if you don't see a valid site. They could then force developers to get a key and proxy the image over from Reddit (if the key leaked, they'd be on the hook, so you'd almost have to do it server-side)
But that's a bunch of effort on both sides, and people would just reupload somewhere else. It might even lead more people off Reddit
I'm thinking you came to this idea from Reddit saying they started hosting themselves to save money. Here's some reasons why that situation is different
First, imgur does have a system to restrict outside links. Certain content requires either to see it on their site or to meet criteria, like a referral header.
Second, lemmy is basically leaching off Reddit's hosting, but does actually have our own image hosting. Imgur was created to serve Reddit - if imgur decided to delete popular Reddit posts, the site would have looked dead. They were already paying imgur for the service
Third, who says Reddit was telling the truth? They've been chasing the IPO for a long time now, so of course they're going to sell every new feature as profitable. In reality, I'm guessing it was a mix of needing something to spend money on to increase their valuation and wanting more control over their content since imgur had grown beyond just serving Reddit
I imagined most image hosting websites would have something of the sort to prevent abuse. I really appreciate your explanation, it filled in several holes left in my admittedly poor understanding. Thank you.