Spyke
lemmy.world

A related question I have had is: can you transfer communities you have created to another instance? I'm sure the answer is no.

I've been very happy with lemmy.world, but I will be stopping my donations and finding another instance if it federates with Threads.

22
lemmy.zip

Nothing. They will exist as long as the instance exists.

19
BrikoXreply
lemmy.zip

You can appoint a new mod yourself before leaving, or your own account from a different instance. But if you are the only mod when you delete the account then yes. Instance admins can still apoint someone else though.

19
Tag365reply
lemmy.world

How do you appoint new mods though? I don't see a menu to moderate the communities I created.

2

It's part of the context menu on each post/comment in the community, there's an option to appoint them as mod

So you gotta make a post or comment before you can become a moderator

2

Technically, there's instance admins. But I don't know.

4
gelberhutreply
feddit.de

Are you sure? I mean, the only mod acccount is deleted. account whic created some posts and comments there is deleted. And everything will stay as is?

4
gelberhutreply
feddit.de

In this case, Lemmy contradicts GDPR, and instance admins have legal responsibility.

0
BrikoXreply
lemmy.zip

GDPR only applies to companies with 250+ employees.

1
gelberhutreply
feddit.de

Can you provide a source for this statement? According to legal clarification I checked, the rule to permanently delete user data applicable to small businesses as well.

1
BrikoXreply
lemmy.zip

Sorry I answered a bit out of context. Right to Erasure applies no matter the size, it's the processing of the data records that only applies to companies with 250+ employees.

And Lemmy is GDPR compliant now as if a post/comment is deleted it is removed within 30 days. But it falls down to each instance that federates to process those delete requests. But deleting your account doesn't delate the content you generated not does it claim to do so.

0

Thanks. I fully understand that instance admins are responsible to their instance only. And single post/comment removing logic also makes sense. But the idea that removing account keeps all content untouched sounds rather questionable from a regular-user centric point of view which GDPR follows. I mean this logic would allow goigle/Facebook/Twitter etc to keep basically everything since this is mostly things you created + metadata.

I will try to find out if/what Lemmy documentation says about this.

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