hitagi

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago

Yup, it should work just as if it were a Lemmy community (minus the tags and wiki)

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I think I could try that but from what I understand, a CDN is really important for PieFed.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 day ago

Cool I should really read this some day. I've read Flowers of Evil and Blood on the Tracks. Really like Shuzo Oshimi.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Yup! They already federate. Because PieFed is a bit ahead, there are a few features that might not federate to Lemmy like post flairs It should improve as Lemmy adds those features.

 

Happy 2nd birthday! o(≧∇≦o)

It's June 21 which means Ani.Social turns another year older! Thanks to everyone who has stuck around and to all the newcomers this month! Unfortunately, I never really tracked our stats but the last birthday post mentioned that we were just a bit under 1000 users and now we're at 1600 with 180+ active users per month! But this is a federated platform, so we have users from all over the Fediverse participating in our communities!

I partially started Ani.Social as a kind of personal research project. Learning about the Fediverse as a practical approach toward a democratic social media is really interesting. For the past four years of my life, I have also been generally obsessed with thinking about and consuming Japanese media more analytically and theoretically. So combining that and the Fediverse, Ani.Social was born!

It's been really interesting to learn about how different people consume this so-called "Japanese media" and what kinds of discourse are produced, especially from people who willingly spend time on alternative spaces like the Fediverse.

With that said...

PieFed announcement!

For the past month, I have been testing PieFed, another Reddit-like Fediverse platform. I think it has a lot of potential and its been receiving a lot of development efforts from the Lemmy community lately. Compared to Lemmy, it's both ahead and behind depending on which areas you look. What I particularly like about PieFed is how experimental it is, and that's sort of what I need to further my research.

Right now, PieFed has flairs, spoilers, polls, topics, feeds (like multireddits), better mod and reporting tools.

You can test the future Piefed instance at https://pt.nyaa.social/. The tentative instance domain is Nyaa.Social and will likely share themes with Ani.Social but hopefully it'll be broader than just "anime and its related industries".

I would like to know what other people think, and what kind of ideas we can explore in Nyaa.Social. I don't think it should simply be "an alternative to Lemmy" or "an alternative to Ani.Social." It's a great opportunity to do things differently, and see what works and what doesn't.

There's no official launch date for the new PieFed instance but the earliest you can expect it is July 7. In the meantime, I would like to gather as much feedback on what kind of platform this new instance could be.

Here are a few screenshots of what the place looks like at the moment:

I should mention that Ani.Social is not going anywhere! It will continue to run and it will still be my top priority to make it a stable and easy experience for everybody even after the PieFed instance launches.

Thanks again mods, posters, commenters, donors, lurkers, and everyone else! If you have questions, feel free to ask! Enjoy the summer season! (^o^)/

~~I have unpaid internship to do... (T_T)~~

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I see. Yeah that's a little complex if the author is Russian. This instance is quite flexible but you can also consider literature.cafe if you'd like.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 days ago (3 children)

Sorry! I didn't see this post. I think if it's of East Asian or Southeast Asian origin, then I guess it's fine. There was a thread about that some time ago. I think it's still pinned in this community.

[–] [email protected] 11 points 5 days ago (2 children)

Me except somehow I keep finding new media to enjoy

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I read the manga from time to time. Learned about it from this group too. Can also recommend it for the dirt jokes lol

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago

I tested it on Lemmy.World too and its also broken. I'll try bringing it up with the pictrs dev

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago (2 children)

Ah yeah this image is cursed. I can't upload it too lol. ffprobe doesn't like it for some reason.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (4 children)

Seems to work on my end. I can't reproduce. Are you using a specific client?

or could you send an example image/video that you're trying to upload (using catbox)? if its ffprobe having trouble, I assume it might be a video.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago (2 children)

Fixed now. It was a Cloudflare caching issue. Let me know if it works! @[email protected]

 

 

Kind of a rant. Hoyo blocked my SimpleLogin email. I couldn't receive verification codes. Clicking the "Send" button just returned a "Too many requests. Try again later" error. Every. Single. Time.

No matter how long I waited between login attempts, it kept giving the same error. I also tried logging in through my phone and with different IP addresses.

So I opened a ticket but they were unresponsive after giving my Genshin Impact UID. I found an "account retrieval form" in the Hoyoverse account management webpage, filled it up and had my email address changed. I was able to log in now so it looks like they're blocking SimpleLogin email addresses which sucks. Now I'm thinking of changing my email addresses on other accounts that use SimpleLogin.

Anyway, if you use a SimpleLogin email address, you should probably change it, or at least be prepared to have it changed in the future. :/

 

Thanks for the feedback everyone! I'll be updating the TOU in the coming weeks to include suggestions from the comments.


Policy Updates

I made changes to the policies found in https://ani.social/legal in response to users creating communities that might not be fit for ani.social. The new policy is titled "Community Creation Policy" which aims to limit the scope of communities created in ani.social. Below is a breakdown of the entire policy:

  1. The community should be related to anime, manga, or other related otaku and moe culture.

This should be obvious but "anime" is very broad. Especially the term "otaku culture" which could mean things not completely related to anime and manga (like trains or military) so I would like to limit those. Though in the globalized context, otaku is associated with anime, so I'm thinking of calling it "globalized otaku" or "otaku" (with scare quotes) as suggested by Patrick Galbraith.

  1. The community should have a clearly defined purpose or intent available in the community sidebar before any post, icon, or banner is submitted or uploaded.

This is very specific but I'd like to avoid communities created without any real purpose. This is mostly to avoid spam.

  1. The community should have rules available in the community sidebar. Likewise, the community must not deviate from the AniSocial TOU.

This is self-explanatory. All communities should have rules, otherwise it can't fulfill Rule 2 of this policy. Also, no community can be "above" ani.social's policies.

  1. The community should not feature content displaying genitalia, scat, extreme gore, snuff, or beastiality.

This is to limit "hentai" communities from being created here. I think it's best that hentai communities are created in other servers that can better support pornography. But I'd like to revise this so that discourse on hentai is allowed.

  1. The community’s purpose or intent should not exclusively focus on any of the following topics or niches:

Artificial Intelligence or AI-generated works; Cults or religion; Piracy, leaked media content, or violations of copyright laws; Political ideologies; Sexual intercourse or masturbation

This is to limit niches that might be better suited in other servers or to avoid controversy. It doesn't necessarily mean these topics are completely banned from the server. It just means the purpose of a community cannot be specific to these.

AI, piracy, political ideologies, and sexual intercourse already have their own Lemmy servers. I also banned cults and religion to avoid offending people.

Feedback

I'm looking for feedback specifically for the new Community Creation Policy. I'd like to make changes based on what the community thinks so if there's any changes you'd like, you can post it as a comment here so others can also talk about it. It can be for the other policies too.

I'll just note that policy changes are never really "final" as they change and evolve over time to address new issues and changes in the social atmosphere.

As for now, I'm considering adding these to the current Community Creation Policy to further avoid possible unwanted scenarios:

  • Limitation on number of communities created
  • Age of account or karma required to create communities
  • Limits on commercial activities

As much as possible, I'd like to very specific with the policies to avoid being overbroad. I would also like to avoid a "admin's descretion" clause to avoid abuse.

(a few other things)

I'm slowly adding more tasks to @[email protected]. Recently I added keyword filters to remove certain spam that might come up in the local feed. If Gaen mistakenly removes your post, you can send me a message.

The instance now requires registration applications. This was something I was completely against but we were removed from join-lemmy.org again because of open registrations. As compromise, new sign ups only have to type "I agree" in the text box as part of agreeing to the TOU which will be auto-approved (thank you Lemmy.World for the idea). Also, Gaen denies disposable emails and will send a welcome message to new users. Overall, I think this will turn out to be a good change.

There will probably be more posts like this in the future. Other than policy changes, I'll make a post on updating the site logo in the coming months.

 

This video essay explores recurring imagery of trains in the work of Hideaki Anno. By linking together disparate audio and sound effects from Anno’s TV and cinema, it attempts to explore Anno’s coiled, labyrinthine train space, and chart its phantom contours. It begins by analysing train carriages as a site of mental unrest in Neon Genesis Evangelion (1996). It then contextualizes Anno’s train fixation within film and Japanese history more broadly. In its conclusion, it looks at Anno’s live-action works, before ending on a scene from episode four of Evangelion which uses a train station for a moment of stasis and reconciliation.

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submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

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