Blocklists
Find a file
2023-01-19 17:45:34 -06:00
blocklists newest blocklists 2023-01-19 17:45:34 -06:00
LICENSE Initial commit 2022-11-28 13:41:46 -06:00
README.md Update README.md 2023-01-17 16:24:41 -06:00

Oliphant.Social Shared Blocklist Files

New and improved thanks to the excellent Fediblockhole.

For more information, please check out my blog and how I handle Blocklists.

A current version of the data displayed below is hosted on my blog, at The Blocklist Algorithm.

Updates to the Github README may lag.


The Blocklist Algorithm

This is the process behind creating my unified blocklists. There is no special magic here; everything is created using the FediBlockHole project. If you start off reviewing that project, you'll probably have a pretty good idea of how this works.

Summary: Start with Trusted Sources, create lists from those sources by merging them all together and choosing a "most lenient" policy, where disagreements between the sources take the most lenient server's judgment. This is complicated by trying to create various "Tiers" of moderation, with Tier 0 being the uncontroversial Mastodon flagship servers. Tier 1 is the next step up from that, with Tier 2 sources including a lot more blocks. Tier 3 sources have a very large number of defederations.

This is still objectively better than my former "just use my list" approach. Although I'm pretty proud of my list, so feel free to use it anyway.

Start With Trusted Sources

For starters, I curate a list of trusted sources, including my own server, pulled from the Fedi Council. Admins of Tier1+ servers have opted in to being one of the Trusted Sources, if you see them listed here, I have their explicit permission. (Note: Still waiting for Eugen to acknowledge this project, but I'm assuming he'd be okay with me pulling publicly available defederation data.)

Disclaimer: I try on my server to remove and unban servers that are dead and no longer active, but not all the sources do the same. I cannot make any assurances for any lists beyond my own.

Rank Trusted Sources Into Tiers:

Tier is the algorithm I devised to group trusted sources. Essentially, I wanted to keep the size of the blocklist (and the servers defederated) limited based on the general level of 'moderatedness' or 'opinionatedness,' which is a very subjective criterion and admittedly does not perfectly represent the real world.

It's only somewhat empirical if you go by blocklist size, which is mostly what this is.

Tier 0 is a "regular" or "Mastodon.Social"-sized blocklist, and really it just exists to provide one blocklist to which surely no one can object as a baseline for others. Since these sources aren't part of our Fedi Council, I only provide them for download, Tier0 list, and the "max list. They aren't part of any others.

Tier 1 keeps bigger-than-average blocklists. Tier 2 makes us look like we're not even trying, and Tier 3 have seen some stuff and lived to tell about it, and their blocklists reflect that.

Listed below are the current trusted sources. Click each to review their block data. Each Tier contributes their block data to the tiers above it. You can thus review this data to determine which blocks will appear in the final merge lists. A block introduced in Tier 1 would be carried forward into all Tier 2 and Tier 3 lists. Tier 3 contributions to the block file would thus only appear in the Tier 3 and "Max" lists.

Tier 0

Tier0 is base-level moderation, expected on the flagship servers and as part of the Mastodon Server Covenant. These files are provided for download below, but these results are not included in other combined tier lists.

  1. Mastodon.social
  2. Mastodon.online

Combined Tier 0 File

Tier 1

Tier1 are servers that block somewhat aggressively, like mine.

  1. Oliphant.Social
  2. Union.Place
  3. Sunny.Garden

Combined Tier 1 File - Includes only Tier 1 sources

Tier 2

Tier2 are servers with even larger and more aggressive blocklists.

  1. Mastodon.Art
  2. Toot.Wales
  3. Artisan.Chat

Combined Tier 2 File - Includes Tier 1 - Tier 2 sources

Tier 3

Tier 3 servers have the largest (and thus probably most restrictive) blocklists.

  1. Rage.love

Combined Tier 3 File - Includes Tier 1 - Tier 3 sources

How It Works

All the trusted sources are pulled and updated regularly, with their lists available for download. As part of this process, we generate importable CSV files via the FediBlockHole project, and create the _unified_*_blocklist.csv merge files.

The _unified_max_blocklist.csv includes Tier 0-3 Trusted Sources and chooses the most restrictive option. It is the only file that chooses the max or "least lenient" policy, and the only one that include Tier 0 results commingled with other members of the Fedi Council.

This Max blocklist includes current RapidBlock list recommendations as well. As an illustration of how each algorithm is configurable, notice that I just decided the max list should also include RapidBlock's public list as well, even though it's not included elsewhere.

The FediBlockHole config file is set to use the min setting when creating the final merge file for each tier. This means that where there is a conflict between trusted sources, the least severe setting wins. Silence wins over Suspend, and None+Reject Media would win over both.

Tier0, Tier1, Tier2, and Tier3 are themselves algorithms. There are other ways to combine lists besides this. Essentially, the higher the tier, the larger the blocklist, both the individual server file for download and their contribution to the size of the overall blocklist.

Which File to Use?

The Allowlist

Anyone that appears in the allowlist will not be included in any of the unified blocklist files. This is primarily to ensure that no one who is part of our Fedi Council gets accidentally recommended as a block--even if members of the Fedi Council end up defederating each other in the future, this is just some protection against that.

Also, if you're using one of these lists in an automated fashion and want to be sure you don't show up in the results, either, please let me know.

Note that if you're writing your own custom local process, you should absolutely check if your server is in the defederation list, anyway, to prevent you from loading that entry and defederating yourself, which is a real pain and probably requires server access to fix.

Mastodon should also have built-in protection from defederating yourself, but that is another story.

To be transparent, I manually added a few things to the allowlist, who are not part of our Fedi Council:

  • mastodon.social
  • mastodon.online
  • mstdn.social
  • dair-community.social

The first three are because they are large community servers and a new server admin will likely want to make their own decisions about whether to silence or defederate these servers.

Dair-community.social is a recommended server for black and marginalized voices with solid moderation credentials. It was never in any risk of being defederated, this was just a precautionary measure and statement of solidarity.

Other Algorithms to Come!

Min, Max, Tier0 - Tier 3, these are just the first round of algorithms!

Once other better public lists are available, I can also use those as sources. One list, in particular, is being developed now (not by me) that will look for commonalities between different groups in our fedi council and report only blocks in which there is an agreement between X (say 5?) or more and leave the others off the list.

I plan to provide that as its own blocklist in the future, while also using it to combine with other well-curated lists to provide different files for import.