But previously you said
Yes, I said that because I assumed that we were talking about what happens when the user's instance bans them.
But previously you said
Yes, I said that because I assumed that we were talking about what happens when the user's instance bans them.
Hmm. So, right now, you could totally post in one of the communities on my instance, right? If I ban you, you can't do that any more, but you'll still be able to post everywhere else. But if lemmy.world bans your account, that very account can't be used to post anywhere any more.
You'd have to register somewhere else.
Yes, you'll have to type it out. There's also some kind of intelli-sense thing going on with a popup menu for auto completion.
Well, I'm not really sure about the comment numbers, etc. I saw a pull request solving negative comments in communities, though. So I guess it's still being worked on.
You can tag other users with @username@instance.tld when using the official web UI. I don't know about 3rd party clients, though.
Yes. The users banned on other instances will not be able to access his / her / their instance from their home instance, as they're banned there. Sorry, I'm usually trying to explain myself way too complicated.
No. What I'm talking about is:
I'm situated in Germany, so I didn't want to kick off a debate. 😅 Also, I don't like beer.
You're welcome! Btw, I love Kofola. 😁 (Just had to think about that, because Czech Republic)
No, they aren't, because accounts aren't federated. They're effectively banned from the fediverse, though, since once an account is banned, that very account can't be used to access the fediverse any more. Nothing hinders them to recreate the same accounts on other instaces.
I think, this is really misleading and also UI / UX wise pretty bad, as it clogs up the entire admin panel.
You mean in the admin interface? That's normal. User's banned on OTHER instances will appear there.
Uh... Contact the instance admin, the storage of the server is full. For this, they should have some kind of alert set up, actually.