This may be useful for folks looking to expand their feed. I discovered this on accident and it completely revolutionized my experience on Kbin.
To view all of an instance’s posts, just use https://kbin.social/d/[instance domain here]
This appears to work for all Kbin instances, most Lemmy instances, and some Mastodon instances (this may have to do with their federation with kbin.social - I’m uncertain). Other platforms may work as well. Some examples:
https://kbin.social/d/lemmy.world
https://kbin.social/d/lemmy.ml
https://kbin.social/d/geddit.social
https://kbin.social/d/mastodon.social
https://kbin.social/d/hachyderm.io
Just hit the button to subscribe, and the entire instance is in your feed. It also provides a nice jumping off point to explore and subscribe to specific communities on that instance.
When you use this technique with a list like what’s available from the Fediverse Observer, it really widens the reach of your feed and your ability to participate across the Fediverse.
Dammit, that’s awesome, didn’t even see the block button - you got me bonus hunting now… :)
Bonus #2 - Turns out the /d/ parameter works for ANY domains with content posted on Kbin or in your feed.
For instance, let’s say you wanna see (or block) everything posted from Facebook:
https://kbin.social/d/facebook.com
or Twitter:
https://kbin.social/d/twitter.com
I gotta hand it to Ernest - this platform has got some kickass code under the hood.
Are you suggesting I can block any media posted to kbin from those websites!? My god…I could block the porn gifs at the source. Ha ha! Get less fucked, timeline!
On the minus side, since instances only have to take on the data from whatever their users are specifically subbed to and they ignore everything else, I wonder if users subbing to multiple entire instances like that will drastically increase load in a way that would prove difficult for a young server?
I’m not a tech person at all, so I may have misunderstood, but isn’t kbin’s federation already backed up temporarily because of the wealth of combined activity?
…and a kbin instance will run in docker (or on a raspberry Pi) with only 2gb of ram… I’m with you there is some crazy clever code propping this all up!