Can confirm that I can also reproduce this. Interesting.
> Blacksky is literally the only such example of alternative infrastructure that I know of That doesn't mean other places aren't doing so. As an example - here's a list of all the relays that mirror the ATProto network:…
Blacksky is now fully independent and does not have any reliance on Bluesky whatsoever. In fact, in cases where Bluesky _did_ go down, Blacksky was still working fine (if a little slow due to the amount of Bluesky…
Respectfully - You are working for one of the largest companies on the planet. You push code that gets used by millions of people. How on earth are you not thoroughly testing your changes??? How can something like this…
Dunno necessarily if they are _forced_ to expose that data. Something like OAuth means that you can give different levels of private data to different actors, based on what perms they request. Then you just have whoever…
I think it can be explained a little better. When you write a post, you save it to your PDS. Think of it like writing a blog. You're done, you hit submit, it shows up on a server somewhere. You can run your own server…
Can confirm that I can also reproduce this. Interesting.
> Blacksky is literally the only such example of alternative infrastructure that I know of That doesn't mean other places aren't doing so. As an example - here's a list of all the relays that mirror the ATProto network:…
Blacksky is now fully independent and does not have any reliance on Bluesky whatsoever. In fact, in cases where Bluesky _did_ go down, Blacksky was still working fine (if a little slow due to the amount of Bluesky…
Respectfully - You are working for one of the largest companies on the planet. You push code that gets used by millions of people. How on earth are you not thoroughly testing your changes??? How can something like this…
Dunno necessarily if they are _forced_ to expose that data. Something like OAuth means that you can give different levels of private data to different actors, based on what perms they request. Then you just have whoever…
I think it can be explained a little better. When you write a post, you save it to your PDS. Think of it like writing a blog. You're done, you hit submit, it shows up on a server somewhere. You can run your own server…