A really interesting look at the recent spam wave.

  • Otter@lemmy.ca
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    9 months ago

    The takeaways are great

    I haven’t read it all yet, but I noticed a bit about pressing charges.

    With decentralized social media, currently there is not a risk of some big social media company coming after you when you cause damages. It doesn’t have to stay that way though.

    What might coordinated legal action look like for the fediverse? They caused a LOT of harm to a lot of people, even if we’re just looking at server costs and time spent by volunteers to clean up the mess.

    • mosiacmango
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      9 months ago

      A first step is RBL intergration, a shared blocklist of spam instances that subscribed instances would use to blackhole spam users/traffic/instances. These are used ubiquitously in email spam systems, so there is a precedent in federation systems for it working. We need to stand up an RBL, and then mod Lemmys federation system to work automatically based on the community blocklist.

      It does mean that poorly admined instances will get blackholed, breaking their federation, but that’s the cost of a healthy network.

      • Unforeseen@sh.itjust.works
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        9 months ago

        This is how email servers have worked for decades - there is no silver bullet and this comes closest. If you poorly admin your email instance, say allowing it to be an open relay (same as just allowing open registrations), you get blacklisted everywhere aka defederated. Same if you have a compromise and someone starts spamming out.