this post was submitted on 08 Jun 2023
40 points (100.0% liked)
Jerboa
10313 readers
1 users here now
Jerboa is a native-android client for Lemmy, built using the native android framework, Jetpack Compose.
Warning: You can submit issues, but between Lemmy and lemmy-ui, I probably won't have too much time to work on them. Learn jetpack compose like I did if you want to help make this app better.
Built With
Features
- Open source, AGPL License.
Installation / Releases
Support / Donate
Jerboa is made by Lemmy's developers, and is free, open-source software, meaning no advertising, monetizing, or venture capital, ever. Your donations directly support full-time development of the project.
Crypto
- bitcoin:
1Hefs7miXS5ff5Ck5xvmjKjXf5242KzRtK
- ethereum:
0x400c96c96acbC6E7B3B43B1dc1BB446540a88A01
- monero:
41taVyY6e1xApqKyMVDRVxJ76sPkfZhALLTjRvVKpaAh2pBd4wv9RgYj1tSPrx8wc6iE1uWUfjtQdTmTy2FGMeChGVKPQuV
- cardano:
addr1q858t89l2ym6xmrugjs0af9cslfwvnvsh2xxp6x4dcez7pf5tushkp4wl7zxfhm2djp6gq60dk4cmc7seaza5p3slx0sakjutm
Contact
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Does lemmy even have a specific NSFL tag? The whole separating out NSFL and NSFW content been talked about on reddit since the beginning of the site. But I don't think any site would do so, because that acknowledges that NSFL stuff is on the site and that could be legally messy.
While I understand how it could cause issues if lemme were on the stock market or were a corporate entity, that's not the case. Even if such things applied, which laws apply? The laws of the country the instance is hosted in? Why would the devs be affected by that? And I'm fairly sure most laws don't regulate nsfl content besides age filters, and they do so way less strictly than NSFW stuff too.
You don't have to be public for issues like that to be a problem. Yeah maybe I was wrong to say "legally" specifically (but yes you probably don't want to host that kind of instance in a country/state were that is illegal). The last thing lemmy needs to do is get bad publicity on the major outlets or even get on the bad side of telecoms and get denied access like liveleak.
The instances themselves would be liable, so the hosters. If they sit in a country with basically no rules it can be here, also lemmy isn't just one Domain so super hard to block, and then the instances can just rename themselves...