This is the correct answer, lots of people think defederating is one-directional when it’s not. It’s 100% blocked communication both ways, meant to be the nuclear option as a last resort (sadly the lack of other moderation tools makes it a second resort after reaching out to the other instance).
If defederating still allowed any communication, it wouldn’t be useful if a remote instance was malicious and exploiting protocol-level bugs and trying to exploit other instances. Defederating should protect against that too, hence 0 communication whatsoever.
The uni-directional option would be limiting a remote instance, which unfortunately isn’t implemented here.
I read elsewhere that it’s not completely bidirectional when it comes to posts on a third party instance. For example, if lemmy.world and beehaw.org users both post to a thread on another instance that they are both still federated with, lemmy.world users will see the beehaw.org users’ posts, but not the other way around.
I haven’t confirmed if this is true yet though, so maybe someone can correct me if I’m wrong.
This is the correct answer, lots of people think defederating is one-directional when it’s not. It’s 100% blocked communication both ways, meant to be the nuclear option as a last resort (sadly the lack of other moderation tools makes it a second resort after reaching out to the other instance).
If defederating still allowed any communication, it wouldn’t be useful if a remote instance was malicious and exploiting protocol-level bugs and trying to exploit other instances. Defederating should protect against that too, hence 0 communication whatsoever.
The uni-directional option would be limiting a remote instance, which unfortunately isn’t implemented here.
I read elsewhere that it’s not completely bidirectional when it comes to posts on a third party instance. For example, if lemmy.world and beehaw.org users both post to a thread on another instance that they are both still federated with, lemmy.world users will see the beehaw.org users’ posts, but not the other way around.
I haven’t confirmed if this is true yet though, so maybe someone can correct me if I’m wrong.