Yes they are, but you have my profile on your server and you do not need to leave the server to view my profile…
should link to
https:// mbin.instance/u/ .instance
and not to https:// lemmy.instance/u/user
Your (mostly) friendly admin.
Interested in #kpop #programming #photography #movies #cats #technology
Yes they are, but you have my profile on your server and you do not need to leave the server to view my profile…
should link to
https:// mbin.instance/u/ .instance
and not to https:// lemmy.instance/u/user
Actually that behaviour is very annoying to other platforms. Mbin for example can only link to the lemmy server this user is on and no longer the local profile of that user.
Example:
gets converted to
[@ user @ lemmy.instance](https:// lemmy.instance/u/user
so on mbin this does not open the profile of the user on the local server, but instead links the lemmy instance, so you leave your instance to view the profile.
(spaces included so this won’t get converted to mentions, etc)
iodéOS here and I can’t find it on my phone either (yes I looked at the system apps)
Well I did set one up today and the mails land in the spam folder for GMX, GMail and Microsoft (@live.de), although I set up SPF, rDNS, and DKIM. I have to take a look at how to setup DMARC, beacause my domain hoster doesn’t allow free configuration of the TXT entries, you have to use templates and there isn’t one for DMARC
I am using it too and I love it. I only know source tree as a competitor and in comparision it sucks…
You dont have to pay for it, even when using it comercially (unpess they changed that)
I wouldnt say that. however setting uo your own mail server is a lot of work, as you have to abide a lot of “security” rules (SPF, DKIM, DMARC, rDNS). Additionally some hosters reuire you to apply for port 25 to be unblocked (e.g. hetzner)
yeah exactly. On mbin it works this way and lemmy inserting the link breaks that. But it does it for communities in the community description sometime as well, though I don’t know if it is just a user “error” or a lemmy error