![](https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/9926b05a-a106-42e6-9f71-8604967a65a6.png)
![](https://beehaw.org/pictrs/image/c0e83ceb-b7e5-41b4-9b76-bfd152dd8d00.png)
Last I checked, Joplin does not use a folder structure that is easy to port over. Their files are all id’s instead of usable file names, so without Joplin, you won’t be finding anything.
They are still plaintext .MD files though.
Last I checked, Joplin does not use a folder structure that is easy to port over. Their files are all id’s instead of usable file names, so without Joplin, you won’t be finding anything.
They are still plaintext .MD files though.
Even if lemmy itself doesn’t support it, there are plenty of ways to log visitors ips and correlate that data with lemmy to figure out who the user is.
EX: Using a revese proxy like cloudflare or nginx, which are both very common.
Even if lemmy itself doesn’t support it, there are plenty of ways to log visitors ips and correlate that data with lemmy to figure out who the user is.
EX: Using a revese proxy like cloudflare or nginx, which are both very common.
Even if lemmy itself doesn’t support it, there are plenty of ways to log visitors ips and correlate that data with lemmy to figure out who the user is.
EX: Using a revese proxy like cloudflare or nginx, which are both very common.
Or perhaps commenting asap so that you have to wait the longest after commenting.