

For some reason I had Singapore in my head as being way larger like Japan or Korea.
Blind geek, fanfiction lover (Harry Potter and MLP). keyoxide: aspe:keyoxide.org:PFAQDLXSBNO7MZRNPUMWWKQ7TQ


For some reason I had Singapore in my head as being way larger like Japan or Korea.


How is this different from cosmos-cloud.io? The feature list looks identical.


Unfortunately, though, we don’t have the population of Singapore. While I would love this to work, I just don’t see merchants implementing yet another payment provider.


Right, but Canada is small enough that none of the large merchants are going to implement this, are they? Interac already has a payments API, and I’ve only ever encountered it used in the wild once.


How is this better than what already exist?


Sarcasm: Yup. The black people who were lynched should have just participated in local communities and confronted the KKK! That’ll fix everything!
Anyway, online isn’t the place to take up space and confront people. You do that in person. Online is where you come to get support, encouragement, and resources for the in-person fight. And that doesn’t work if your online profile is also local. For many people, there online participation cannot, and should not, be geographically local. Remember the “good old days” of the local BBS that you had to dial into? Isn’t it interesting that every single documentary full of sepia toned reminiscences about how wonderful those local communities were is entirely created by and featuring old middle-class white dudes? No women, no homosexuals or transsexuals, no people with disabilities, and no ethnic minorities? I wonder why!
Again, speaking from personal experience: blind people had NFBNet, but it wasn’t local. And the local BBS’s had so much ASCII art and other accessibility issues that we couldn’t participate.
And now, on local Reddits and Facebook groups, nobody uses alt text. I guess that’s my fault for not participating in a space that is completely inaccessible to me. I’m the problem with democracy!


If we look at how toxic and racist the local city groups are on Reddit or Facebook, I’m not sure this is a good model. If I’m a black trans woman living in a small town in Mississippi, my local instance might not even be a safe place, for me.
Similarly, I would encourage blind folks to join us at rblind.com rather than a local instance, because a local instance might not take our needs into account: many have captchas, some use inaccessible themes, etc. At rblind.com you can be sure that we won’t deploy an update or configuration change that will break accessibility, because the server admins and moderators are all blind ourselves. But the beauty of federation means that you can talk to everyone else on other instances, so being part of a particular identity group doesn’t limit you to just talking to other members of that group.
If your response to discussion is curses and insults, please also consider shutting down your instance while your at it.
This is exactly my point, though. Yes, all of these changes are easy and possible. But you have to know about them, first. This is not a drop-in “protect everything without side effects” tool like your initial post seems to say. For every app you put behind it, you need to take time to think over exactly what access is required by whom, when, and how. Does it use Oauth, RSS, .well-known, xmlrpc/pingbacks, RDF/sparql endpoints, etc? Do some robots need to be allowed (for federation, discoverability, automated healthchecks, etc)? Are there consumers of API’s provided by the app? Will file downloads occur from downloaders that resume downloads/chunking for multiple connections at once? What is the profile of the humans you expect to be accessing the service: are they using terminal browsers like lynx, do they disable JavaScript and/or cookies for privacy, are they on a VPN, are they using low profile devices like raspberry pi’s or low-end android tablets, etc? What bots are you intending to block and how do they behave: they may just be running headless chrome and pass all your checks, they may be on zombie consumer machines part of a botnet, etc. As with anything in life, there are no magical shortcuts, and no way to say “block all the bad people I don’t like and allow the good people in” without first defining who the good people are and what you don’t like.
In your case, all you’ve effectively done is said “good people run JavaScript and allow cookies, bad people do not”. Without really thinking through the implications of that. I suspect what you really mean is “I don’t need or want anyone but me accessing my personal lemmy instance”. So why not block lemmy-ui from every country but your own, or even restrict it to subnets belonging to the ISPs you use? That would seem to be a lot easier in the case of a personal instance. In the case of a public instance like mine, though, the problem is much harder.
Good to know. But most RSS readers already pretend to be browsers, because otherwise many publications with misconfigured reverse proxies will block them from accessing the RSS feed. cbc.ca is a good example of this. Because deploying a web firewall is neither easy or trivial, unless you know exactly who needs to access what, when, and why. Most people, in my experience, do not.
In brief testing I get challenges before trying to load robots.txt on hosts running Anubis. I also see reports of it blocking OAuth flows and access to stuff like .well-known
And what about RSS? Favicons? OAuth? robots.txt? There are lots and lots of things that need to be accessed by automated programs without user intervention. It is not trivial to determine what these things might be. For your personal instance, go nuts. But no public instance should be doing this.
What about folks on low spec Android phones? Or folks who browse with JavaScript off? Every solution to block AI will block some percentage of humans.


Hearthstone Access Community Version: https://hearthstoneaccess.com/
Patches full screen reader access into the game, despite no modding API or developer support, and makes it feel like it was natively there from the start. And is usually updated within 1-2 hours of Hearthstone getting a new version.
There are similar addons for Stardew, Slay The Spire, and Factorio. But I consider those less impressive as the game offers APIs for them to use.


Because Spotify, YouTube, Apple Music, etc. are so cheap or free that it’s not worth the trouble of setting one up for the people who have the resources to do it. Sure, download what you want to keep. But for Discovery? The streaming services are fine. And the people who can’t access/afford them also don’t have the resources to set something like this up.


Perfect! Thanks for the info!


How do those of us who loathe the horrific and proven bad idea of quote posts, and also refuse to use Mastodon, opt out of this terrible misfeature? Will blocking anyone who quote posts me and defederating from their instance remove the quote?


These days I can do it all myself. Press control+windows+enter when Windows first boots, and the basic built-in screen reader that’s part of Windows 11 comes on. It’s good enough to get through set-up and install a better screen reader. Sadly, if I were on Linux, that wouldn’t at all be the case. Though I do run multiple Linux servers via SSH, including all of the infrastructure for rblind.com.
I did manage to assemble my DIY Framework 16 laptop, and I’ll upgrade the mainboard in it later this year, but that’s pretty much hitting my limits when it comes to hardware. Soldering is right out, and Oh My God do I hate those damn ipex connectors.


I will also include Grok for comparison. It’s the model I use for images that I think might contain adult content (pornography, violence, whatever) because it won’t refuse anything. Sadly, because I’m boring, I’m using it more for moderation than pleasure. Unfortunately, I have a prompt for it designed to limit refusals, and I forgot to change it. As you can see, that…strongly effected the description. Suddenly there are tits in this picture.
This image appears to be a digitally rendered or CGI artwork depicting a whimsical, fantastical scene in a natural outdoor setting. It does not contain any adult content, including pornography, pedophilia, violence, nudity, blood, death, dead bodies, self-harm, harm to children, or other X-rated elements. There is no visible text in the image, so no racism, doxing, hateful or insulting material, or otherwise objectionable words are present. The overall tone is serene, magical, and family-friendly, evoking themes of nature and fantasy (similar to something from a fairy tale or children’s storybook).
Detailed Visual Breakdown:
Main Subject: The central focus is a large, realistic-looking giant tortoise (resembling a Galápagos tortoise) slowly walking through a lush, grassy meadow. The tortoise’s shell has been creatively modified in the artwork to serve as the foundation for a small, rustic wooden house. The house is built directly onto the shell, appearing old and weathered, with a shingled roof covered in moss, vines, and small plants growing on it, giving it a dilapidated, abandoned cabin vibe. The house has a small porch with railings, a door, and windows, and there’s a faint plume of smoke rising from a chimney, suggesting it’s inhabited or recently used. The tortoise’s shell itself is textured with moss, dirt, and grass, blending seamlessly with the house, as if the creature is a living, mobile home. The tortoise’s head is extended forward, with its mouth slightly open, and it has a gentle, neutral expression. Its legs are sturdy and visible as it moves through the grass.
Foreground and Environment: The scene is set in a vibrant, green field filled with tall grass, wildflowers (mostly white and yellow daisies or similar blooms), and scattered dandelions. The ground is dotted with small plants and dew-like sparkles, adding a magical glow. The lighting suggests a soft, diffused sunlight, possibly early morning or late afternoon, with a misty or foggy atmosphere in the background.
Secondary Elements: To the right of the tortoise, there’s a small blue tit perched on a moss-covered tree stump. The tit has blue and yellow feathers, with a white underbelly, and it’s facing toward the tortoise, as if curiously observing it. The stump is overgrown with moss and a small pinecone-like object on top. In the distant background, there’s a blurred view of a dense, green forest with trees and foliage, enhancing the sense of a peaceful, enchanted wilderness.
Composition and Style: The image is in a wide, horizontal format (like a landscape photo or artwork). It’s highly detailed and photorealistic, with a focus on textures like wood grain, moss, and animal skin, suggesting it could be from digital art software, a video game concept, or an illustration. There are subtle particle effects, like floating specks or sparkles in the air, adding to the dreamy quality. No human figures, vehicles, or modern elements are present—it’s purely nature and fantasy-based.
Born blind. I dream entirely in sound. People who went blind later in life, however, may still see in dreams.