An update:

  • fmhy.ml is gone, due to the ongoing fiasco with mali government taking all their .ml domains back
  • As such, lemmy.fmhy.ml is also gone, we are currently exploring ways to refederate (or somehow restart federation entirely) without breaking anything substantial
  • We have backups, so don’t worry about data loss (you can view them on other instances anyway)

Currently, we have fmhy.net and are exploring options to somehow migrate, thank you for your patience.

  • AZmaybe9
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    1582 years ago

    Man this is all so interesting to see so many unique situations testing the Fediverse to see how it holds up.

    • PupBiru
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      462 years ago

      let’s hope they’re interesting because it’s novel and the problems were there with other solutions just solved ages ago rather than the alternative: “so many unique situations” because there are a litany of “oops didn’t think of that” moments that will continue to crop up

    • Corgana
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      62 years ago

      IMO the real takeaway is that a big instance disappeared overnight and yet here we all are on the fediverse talking about it.

  • Square Singer
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    2 years ago

    WIll this also affect all other .ml domains? Or is this some anti-piracy thing? (I don’t know fmhy, but from the name I guess it’s about piracy.)

    • sab
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      742 years ago

      It seems to be Mali just wanting their domains back, in which case it’s uncertain times for all .ml domains.

        • sab
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          2 years ago

          Never hurts. Could be a good opportunity to look around the threadiverse and see if you find anything interesting.

          However, as it only affects the domain, I expect the Lemmy developers will manage to migrate user data to the new domain should lemmy.ml go down. So your account won’t just disappear, but it might go down for a while. It might also affect communities hosted on .ml domains, as followers from other instances will not have the correct path any more.

          • Square Singer
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            82 years ago

            Yeah, they are actively working on functionality to migrate user accounts and other data between instances, so that they can use that functionality to migrate everything on an instance to another instance.

            Since migrating data affects all the replicated data on other instances as well, I guess when they migrate lemmy.ml somewhere else, all of Lemmy will be down for a day or two, being just overloaded with all the migration stuff.

        • Dalë
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          42 years ago

          I’ve migrated from fmhy to feddit.uk, luckily my subscriptions were on a cached web page soon was able to manually re-subscribe.

          • redcalcium
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            2 years ago

            Unfortunately, no.

            Currently, activitypub identity is tied to domain name. While mastodon support migration as long as the old domain is still up during the migration process, AFAIK Lemmy doesn’t even have a process to migrate an instance to a new domain yet.

            So basically, if you switch your instance domain, you’ll mess up all your federation network, unless Lemmy devs implement a solution soon.

            • Ahri Boy
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              22 years ago

              Calckey.social will be transferring all data to new firefish.social, first in the Fediverse.

    • @Falldamage@lemm.ee
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      2 years ago

      I understand it as the Mali government is taking back all the domains after a subletting contract ran out. A lot of sensitive emails that should go to .mil (US military) has been typo-sent to .ml-addresses instead. Here’s some more reading.

      (I am very tired here and might have misunderstood everything, please correct me if I am wrong)

      • @JshKlsn@lemmy.ml
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        152 years ago

        Perhaps the military should have a system in place to not allow emails to be sent outside of very specific TLDs if it’s that sensitive? And perhaps have an automated contact book, instead of relying on someone typing out the to: address manually to be able to make that mistake in the first place?

        Seems like some very basic security measures for something so serious.

  • Nix
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    632 years ago

    Lemmy has had such a crazy month and a half. Insane growth, XSS injections, DDOS attacks, admin takeover, domain name seizures. What a wild ride

      • @Geth@lemmy.world
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        2 years ago

        Nobody really knows for sure. It just sort of disappeared one day with no warning.

        • @Gork@lemm.ee
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          52 years ago

          Is this going to be an unsolved mystery of the Internet? A spooky Fediverse legend?

    • @Blaze@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      182 years ago

      Yes, that’s reassuring. Also, nice to see their main website, I never actually noticed it existed

    • @JshKlsn@lemmy.ml
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      82 years ago

      Damn, lemmy.zip, eh? If that instance is public, I don’t see that being a good thing.

      Tons of businesses, people, etc, are all banning .zip and .mov TLDs for security purposes. I’ve personally banned all those domains from my network as well.

      Bold move.

        • @JoeyJoeJoeJr@lemmy.ml
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          172 years ago

          See https://youtu.be/GCVJsz7EODA and https://youtu.be/V82lHNsSPww

          There are a few problems, but I believe the biggest issue is that .zip and .mov are valid and common file extensions, and it’s common for people to write something like ‘example dot zip’ or ‘attachment dot mov’ in emails, tweets, etc. Things like email clients have features where they automatically convert text that looks like a web address into clickable links. So now, retroactively, all those emails etc suddenly have a link, where they used to just have text, and the domains that are equivalent to those previously benign file names are being purchased by nefarious actors to exploit people unaware of the issue.

          • @CoderKat@lemm.ee
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            2 years ago

            But there’s only an issue if the software you’re using auto linkifies the domain. They often don’t and won’t. This seems like a hypothetical problem that probably doesn’t exist for most major software. I certainly know no email software is gonna auto linkify this.

            If you’re curious, you can see if whatever software you’re viewing this post in auto linkifies (neither are for me): hshshssu.zip iwuf8aowk.mov

            (And if we’re manually linkifying, then you don’t need to use the new TLD. Eg, not-a-virus.zip.)

            • @JoeyJoeJoeJr@lemmy.ml
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              32 years ago

              At 1:30 in that second video, he shows that YouTube already converts dot zip domains, even in old comments that predate the domain’s existence. At 3:19, he shows/mentions Twitter, Reddit, Facebook, and LinkedIn. I would consider those major platforms. And keep in mind, it only takes one person downloading one file to cause major damage - the LMG hack was due to someone downloading and trying to open a fake PDF that was sent via email: https://youtu.be/yGXaAWbzl5A.

              So yes, not everything does or will auto convert the links, but I think you are underestimating the potential for issues here.

      • @Monologue@lemmy.zip
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        12 years ago

        i don’t doubt there have been a lot of cases of those tlds used for scams but i haven’t been negatively effected by this instances domain name.

        feel free to read the discussion about it here though

    • redcalcium
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      112 years ago

      Are you using the free domain deal, or are you paying for your .ml domain? I suspect they only revoking those unpaid .ml domains.

        • redcalcium
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          2 years ago

          You might still buy your old .ml domain once Mali government open up registration again, assuming domain squatters doesn’t grab it first.

      • redcalcium
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        42 years ago

        .ee is owned by Estonia. Just pray Estonia wouldn’t do the same shenanigan and cause your instance to go down.

        • AChiTenshi
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          22 years ago

          The instance up and disappeared right after it’s admin said they were going g to defederate with another instance. There was no warning it was just gone the next day.

          There is lots of speculation around it, but I think the admin got scared of the implication that their servers still held content from the other instance that was illegal in their country.

  • Nix
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    232 years ago

    I’ve been seeing posts from users on lemmy.ml though? How’s that possible

    • Ghoelian
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      2 years ago

      I think in theory yes, since the .ml tld is now managed by the Mali government instead of some guy that had an agreement with them.

  • r00ty
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    202 years ago

    Re-federation is probably possible. BUT! You’re going to always have problems with older content. Case in point my federation error messages is at 2300. About half are failed requests on fmhy.ml.

    So for re-federation what’s needed:

    1: Remote instances should unsubscribe all users from any fmhy groups. They’re dead now. They can only announce that and hope they do. I reckon when their errors start ramping up (as I saw yesterday) they will be looking into why. Probably to help de-federate from the old URL
    2: The fmhy instance should unsubscribe all users from all remote groups but keep a note of the groups while identifying as fmhy.ml. Then once on a configuration for the new domain re-subscribe to each one. The first step should hopefully stop them trying (and failing) to federate new events to the old URL. The second step should trigger federation with the new one.
    3: They could be able to keep the DB. But I am not sure in what places the old domain might be stored in the DB and what would need fixing there. Also not sure if they’d need to regenerate keys. Not sure if they’ll see the key was attached to the old domain and refuse to talk to the instance.

    Now what’s going to be a problem? Well ALL the existing content out there has references to users on the old domain. It’s VERY hard to fix that. Like every instance would need to fix their database. Not worth it. But, whenever someone likes/unlikes or comments or whatever a post made from fmhy.ml then there’s a good chance a remote instance will queue up a retrieval of:

    1: User info about the poster/commentor/liker
    2: Missing comments/posts for a like/comment event

    And those will fail and error log. I don’t think there’s a way around that aside from editing the whole database on every instance. Again, IMO not worth it.

    Would be a nice federation feature if, provided you could identify with the correct private key, announce a domain change which would automatically trigger the above in federated instances, or at the very least some kind of internal redirect for outgoing messages.

    • @Serinus@lemmy.ml
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      132 years ago

      If I’m running lemmy.world, I wouldn’t unsubscribe my people. I’d wait for that instance to move to a new domain and just find/replace in the database.

      Not every instance needs to migrate fmhy. Some can just leave that stuff broken. If the biggest half dozen instances migrate manually, fmhy would be able to keep most of their subscribers.

      I do wonder how often instances will keep looking for fmhy without intervention. Seems like tooling to migrate or discontinue an instance wouldn’t be too difficult to build. At least it wouldn’t if they didn’t have a million other things on their plate.

      We could use a few less third party clients and more work on Lemmy itself. Unless you’re going to bring over your userbase like RiF and Apollo can.

      • r00ty
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        42 years ago

        Yes, although you might need to fudge keys if they’re properly enforced. Looking at kbin I can see requests are at least signed with the private key. Not sure if the public key is stored somewhere in database, or is pulled from the instance using DNS as a security guarantor (I guess) every time.

        I don’t have any subscriptions to them, but I have those 1000+ errors just from posts their users were involved in.

    • redcalcium
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      2 years ago

      Afaik mastodon has a way for instances to migrate to a new domain, but the old domain must be up during the migration process. Lemmy on the other hand don’t even have any domain migration procedure yet. People will probably go nuts about this on their GitHub issues portal.

      • r00ty
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        62 years ago

        Possibly. I think mastadon has been around a bit longer though? Not sure why the old domain must be up. Unless they don’t store public keys of known instances and they rely on DNS for the security.

        e.g. Instance A signs a request, Instance B queries Instance A via DNS lookup (as is normal) and checks public key confirms signature and allows it.

        • redcalcium
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          12 years ago

          I got curious so I start digging into how mastodon do it. It’s more like a hack, really. Mastodon uses WebFinger to resolve user account, so when you change domain, you can leave the old domain up so your federated servers can still resolve your users and realized the domain has been changed and update their federation data. But it turns out you can’t exactly retire the old domain either because it’s still tied to user account internally. So if you lose control of your old domain, you’re probably as screwed as fmhy.ml.

          • r00ty
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            12 years ago

            Yeah, which is why I think storing remote user and instance public keys might be better. Then that can be used to authenticate the migration request (it’d probably need to be an extension to the activitypub standard).

            The biggest problem I see is that an instance doesn’t know about all the instances that have data pointing to them. So how does it communicate the changes to everyone? The mastadon way is probably the sensible way to do it, despite not supporting the loss of control of domain scenario.

  • @CMahaff@lemmy.world
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    192 years ago

    I posted this on another thread about this, but I’ll repost it here:

    I have made a tool that can backup / copy your account settings, subscriptions, and blocks to a new account: https://github.com/CMahaff/lasim

    There are others out there as well if you look.

    Obviously the loss of .ml communities would still be catastrophic to Lemmy, but at least your new account won’t start from ground-zero, and you can be less effected by downtime by having 2 accounts with the same subscriptions.

    • Riker_Maneuver
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      42 years ago

      Fantastic tool; thank you. I’ve been keeping 2 accounts—just in case—and this simplifies it significantly.

  • FlashPossum
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    172 years ago

    Is Mali gov just removing all DNS records without warning?
    No respect for existing contracts, or at least some heads up a couple of months earlier.

  • nfntordr
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    102 years ago

    I hope FMHY comes back. Didn’t realise how much I liked it until it was gone.