Right now, NSFW-marked communities are by default(?) not shown by their home instance to non-logged-in users in the community list, and even if you go to them manually no posts are shown.

Fine, but they also aren’t shown to logged in users on other home instances, unless somehow already federated over. If you go to the community’s instance, it can’t tell you are logged in, and if you go to your home instance you can’t see a list of all communities on the other instance that might be available.

Also, older posts that are marked NSFW can’t be gotten by anyone with an account anywhere other than the instance they were posted to. When you subscribe to a community on another instance it federates over a few posts, but to doesn’t request and federate older posts as you try and page back through the archive. The normal solution is to view the old posts on the source instance, but if the community is marked NSFW the source instance won’t let you read the archive there without a local account.

  • poVoq@slrpnk.net
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    2 years ago

    It is very much consensus in my corner of the Fediverse. And of course it matters where you sign up.

    • ᗪIᐯEᖇGEᑎTᕼᗩᖇᗰOᑎIᑕᔕ
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      2 years ago

      I’d say, this is not the way users should be expected to interact/think of such a system. The idea of forums of the same theme re-created multiple times, or people expected to have multiple user accounts, seems broken by design.

      • poVoq@slrpnk.net
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        2 years ago

        It isn’t broken. It very much works as intended. You are expecting a centralized system? I think you might be in the wrong place then.

        • ᗪIᐯEᖇGEᑎTᕼᗩᖇᗰOᑎIᑕᔕ
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          2 years ago

          Please don’t be upset because someone differs in their philosophy. I’m not talking about a centralised system but decentralisation in the sense of offloading and failure resistance, while also allowing differing “communities” to have their space with the same topic.

          Anyway, until i read your comment, i came across the question, “how to interact with remote servers” multiple times, and never once was it recommended that people create multiple user accounts. Take it as you wish but please also consider the possibility that whatever was once conceptualised is increasingly becoming irrelevant once people use a system in a more intuitive way – it’s now growing organically. Don’t get into that once-typical “made by technicians for technicians” pitfall that whatever works in their mind would have to work for everyone.
          It’s the twenty-first century, so it’s time that the machine has to adapt to the human, not the human has to adapt to the machine.

          • poVoq@slrpnk.net
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            2 years ago

            I think you got it exactly backwards. What I describe is a human sized and centered system, while what you describe is something that tries to replicate the centralized advertisement driven social media silos. Sure, people are so used to them that they have a hard time imagining alternatives, but imagining alternatives is why we are here right now, no?

            • ᗪIᐯEᖇGEᑎTᕼᗩᖇᗰOᑎIᑕᔕ
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              2 years ago

              Geeezus … there i wanted to tell you somehow that the train has left the station. Well then, you being the senior admin of a specialised instance, and me being a newcomer who purposefully has an account on a general-purpose server roughly in my area, perhaps we can agree on the fact that the system seems designed to both handle special-purpose sites (which is a kind of centralisation) and general-purpose aggregators (which in effect acts as a centralisation at different aspect)? … I will not argue with you but you will also not command others. And btw. why is there no federated user-namespace if it is so that servers are thought to be of themed purpose?

              Have a nice day/evening. ;-)