Skip to content

Piero Bosio Social Web Site Personale Logo Fediverso

Social Forum federato con il resto del mondo. Non contano le istanze, contano le persone

Deleting a post vs deleting an entire comment tree

Technical Discussion
65 15 11

Gli ultimi otto messaggi ricevuti dalla Federazione
  • read more

  • @julian i'd say the confusion is primarily that we've shifted topic around several different things and i'm still not sure which is the intended topic of the discussion :x

    - deleting posts that are in a thread
    - removing posts from a thread
    - implications for downstream posts in a thread when some ancestor in the reply chain is deleted/removed
    - deleting a thread that is in a forum
    - removing a thread from a forum
    - moving a thread to the "uncategorized" forum
    - ...?

    read more

  • @julian if the intent is to signal what happens when nodebb moves a thread to "uncategorized", then i think the simplest thing is for nodebb to treat "uncategorized" as a forum in itself, still. you already assign them an id of -1, so you are in effect treating the "uncategorized" category as a category still.

    read more

  • @julian the confusing thing to me, though, is that both Delete and Remove already don't imply anything about posts in the thread if the thread is deleted/removed from the forum.

    by default, if you Delete a thread, the forum might still have a broken link to the now-deleted thread, and the posts also have broken links to the thread.

    by default, if you Remove a thread from the forum, the posts still exist within the thread.

    read more

  • trwnh@mastodon.social specifically however, is that you're not deleting the context. Just removing it.

    NodeBB has the concept of a context not belonging to an audience (the "uncategorized" pseudo category.) in those specific situations, contexts would be removed from the audience, not deleted.

    Lemmy and Piefed don't have these concepts, so they simply delete them. So therein lies some of the confusion I believe.

    read more

  • @julian like removing a whole thread from the forum? Remove(object=thread, target=forum)? this seems like something altogether different than removing posts from a thread.

    removing threads from a forum is possible but if the thread is owned by the forum then the forum can also delete them.

    the part that differs between impls is whether Delete(thing that is a context) should do anything to objects where context = the Delete.object, right? i think it makes the most sense to just orphan them.

    read more

  • trwnh@mastodon.social it signals that the actor is removing the context from the targeted audience.

    The audience can optionally announce it, and receivers synchronizing with that audience (per 1b12) should follow suit and remove the context as well.

    read more

  • @julian what does Remove(Context) mean here?

    read more
Post suggeriti
  • 0 Votes
    1 Posts
    2 Views
    I've proposed two possible outlines for a document about #SolidProject #Activitypub integration https://github.com/solid-contrib/activitypub-interop/issues/2#issuecomment-3590595603The first is more note/tutorial/primer like, because a large part of the content is just redescribing ActivityPub for a Solid audience.The second assumes prior knowledge of ActivityPub and primarily describes what is needed to integrate ActivityPub with Solid, based on three architectures:- Server support- External processing- External endpoints
  • 0 Votes
    1 Posts
    15 Views
    Moin Leute ich brauche mal ein bisschen #fedipower zum Thema Mastodon / Activitypub Bots.Gibt es eine einheitliche API mit der ich zum Beispiel bei Mastodon, GoToSocial, Misskey etc. Nachrichten / Bilder für einen Bot Account abliefern kann oder kocht da jedes Projekt sein eigenes Süppchen?Ich habe für Emby ja schon Plugins für Telegram und Matrix geschrieben und würde nun gerne eines für das Fediverse bauen. Aber nur um ein paar Statusmeldungen abzuliefern wäre ein kompletter ActivityPub Client in CSharp wohl overkill (und auch ausserhalb meines Horizonts).#activitypub #fediverse #bots #softwaredevelopment #emby #boostok #pleaseboost
  • 0 Votes
    5 Posts
    40 Views
    @rickscully working on it 🫣it is more complicated than I thought!
  • 0 Votes
    1 Posts
    19 Views
    Running a community in the Fediverse means balancing openness with safety. Every year, @iftas takes the pulse of administrators, moderators, and community managers with their Annual Needs Assessment. This survey helps identify what’s working, where support is needed, and which tools can make a difference for those keeping decentralized spaces safe.The 2025 survey is now openTake part in the IFTAS Needs Assessment (5–10 minutes).Take the survey now(If you haven’t seen them before, you can also take a look at last year’s report)Last year’s responses represented moderators of over 4.3 million accounts across ActivityPub platforms. With WordPress now the largest group of federating instances, it’s especially important for our community of hosts, site admins, and moderators to be heard.Moderation in WordPress: From Site-Wide to Personal ControlsWe recently introduced a major update to the ActivityPub plugin for WordPress: personalized and site-wide moderation tools.Site administrators can now set domain, keyword, and actor-level blocks that protect the entire site.Individual users can fine-tune their own experience with personal blocks, managed directly from their profiles.Content is checked against both global and personal rules—so moderation works at every level.These improvements directly address needs raised in previous IFTAS surveys, making moderation more discoverable, flexible, and effective for WordPress communities in the Fediverse.Your Input MattersIFTAS uses the Needs Assessment to guide tools, policies, and advocacy that reflect the real-world challenges of moderators—especially those in under-resourced communities. The more representative the responses, the stronger the outcomes for everyone.If you’re running a federating WordPress site, please consider:Filling out the survey yourself.Sharing it with other admins, moderators, and community organizers.Reminding folks that it’s anonymous, quick, and impactful.Take the 2025 Fediverse Needs AssessmentTogether, we can keep building a safer, healthier Fediverse—one that reflects the needs of its communities.