this post was submitted on 13 Oct 2024
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What are the risks associated with this? With image uploading capabilities and the like I'm thinking there might be an issue with people posting highly illegal content. I used to run some smaller forums 15 years ago and that went fine, but it feels like the risks are higher today... I'm both thinking about one's own personal mental health in needing to moderate such content, and also whether it'll be a legal liability to run an instance if people post illegal content.

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[–] scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech 22 points 1 month ago (17 children)

I never thought I'd be a registered CSAM reporter with the feds, but then I decided to host public content via Lemmy. Turns out, while 99.9% of users are great or fine, that 0.1% are just assholes for the sake of being assholes

[–] slazer2au@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago (3 children)

If you selfhost a single user instance do you still need to register? I get registering if you host a multiuser instance.

[–] scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech 3 points 1 month ago (2 children)

If it's open to public, yes. Even if they don't have an account if they can still see the offending content then yes.

However, I bet if you use nginx you could somehow block public access and require an account. Something like if not login page and not has a token then block

[–] abff08f4813c@j4vcdedmiokf56h3ho4t62mlku.srv.us 2 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I'm looking into doing this on my single-user instance. I've already modified the code so it doesn't host images that get federated (it simply links to the URL on the original instance), but it would be good to lock things down a bit tighter.

Now that they added image proxying I feel a lot better about it, but it's still risky since it gets piped through my server

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