I could also see this turning into a form of DoS attack. I’m sure there’s very little leeway in ignoring “bad faith” reports so if you have an instance you could be responsible for investigating thousands of reports per day. And if you take the safe route and remove anything that’s reported, until deemed safe, you might as well turn off your instance.
There’s gotta be some kind of limited liability for this kind of thing. I mean, banks wouldn’t be liable if someone put csam in a safe deposit box or (assuming they don’t x-ray packages) UPS shipping csam in a sealed package. I think there just needs to be reasonable safeguards against it but I don’t know if any of that is built into the software.
Appreciate the link but this doesn’t make me feel much better. Seems like their license and terms of use is basically, “Ask and we’ll tell you if you can do that.” Not very transparent.
Kebab. Not my favorite visually speaking but I had RSI issues for a while and I’m still very focused on limiting keystrokes (no shift key needed with kebab).
I’m not colorblind and I find this a PITA to read.
I guess I could just try a minimal install (uncheck every box) and see how it goes.
Got the browser to hide scores but Boost seems to ignore the setting.
Just saw it’s a known issue - https://lemmy.world/post/6459472
Sounds like an interesting experiment. Know if I can do this using Boost?
If this is legal then it’s a giant gaping loophole in the system. Not just because it’s easy to harass someone but because it sounds incredibly easy for a cop to call in an “anonymous tip” on someone they suspected of wrongdoing but had no evidence to support it. I’m almost positive the Supreme Court has even held that evidence that was gathered in the course of raiding the wrong building is legal as it’s an “honest mistake”.