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Jeffrey Paul 9376944373 remove junk accidentally committed to Dockerfile 4 年之前
cmd/feta updated for new git locationupdated for new git location 4 年之前
database add LRU caching 4 年之前
ingester major overhaul, including: 4 年之前
instance commit before applying 2p patch 4 年之前
jsonapis now passes linting 4 年之前
locator builds again 4 年之前
manager now actually does something 4 年之前
process instance handler tweaks 4 年之前
seeds make sure we spider the instance that sent me death threats 4 年之前
storage now actually does something 4 年之前
toot now actually does something 4 年之前
view commit before applying 2p patch 4 年之前
.drone.yml remove circleci config, don't push on drone build 4 年之前
.gitignore now actually does something 4 年之前
Dockerfile remove junk accidentally committed to Dockerfile 4 年之前
Makefile working toward storing state in db 4 年之前
README.md builds again, not sure how i broke it, also: 4 年之前
go.mod update sums 4 年之前
go.sum update sums 4 年之前

README.md

feta

archives the fediverse

todo

  • scan toots for mentions and feed to locator
  • put toots in a separate db file
  • test with a real database
  • save instancelist to store more often (maybe on each new one added not during initial load)
  • verify instances load properly on startup
  • do some simple in-memory dedupe for toot storage
  • make some templates using pongo2 and a simple website
  • update json APIs
  • index hashtags
  • index seen urls

status

Build Status

ethics statement

It seems that some splinter groups are not well acquainted with the norms of publishing data on the web.

Publishing your toots/messages on a server without marking them private or requiring authentication and thus making them available to the web is an act of affirmative consent to allowing others to download those toots/messages (usually by viewing them in a browser on your profile page). If you don't want your toots downloaded by remote/unauthenticated users on the web, do not publish them to the web.

If you publish them to the whole web (and your home instance serves them to all comers), do not be surprised or feel violated when people download (and optionally save) them, as your home instance permits them to.

We do not have a right to be forgotten, as we do not have a right to delete legitimately-obtained files from the hard drives of other people.

Author

Jeffrey Paul <sneak@sneak.berlin>

@sneak@sneak.berlin