This post alone now has as many upvotes as I saw someone on Reddit claim Lemmy had total users.
KelsonV
I would assume it involves computer-related writings, history, etc. How people communicate online, hypertext fiction, wikis, the differences in how people write and present media online compared to on paper. How people have used memes, emoji, etc. Hacker lore. Some overlap with digital arts and social sciences - ethics, media creation
Hmm, that's close, but not quite. I'm testing to find out what's confirmed to work and not work between each pair of platforms, not what features are supported on each.
Ex. Lemmy and GoToSocial both support following, posting, and replying, and you can do all of them from other platforms like Mastodon...but they can't interact properly with each other yet.
I'm collecting that sort of thing and reporting bugs to each project as I find them.
It's standard boilerplate lawyerspeak for "You allow us to show other people your content." You'll find the same thing on just about any commercial site with user-supplied content, where they want to avoid getting sued for copyright infringement by their users.
Sorry, I just can't take seriously someone who actually takes the Musk/Taibbi spin on the Twitter Files at face value.
Even just caching the not-logged-in views can be a big help, as I've found with self-hosted WordPress.