This document details how Programming.Dev ("programming.dev", "we", "us", "our") choose to defederate with other instances. If an instance wishes to be federated and thus have their content show on our sites they must abide by the policy and ensure they do not do one of the actions in the how an instance gets defederated section.
Our sites are federated with other instances. Instances are essentially sites but that are instances of federated software. This means that content posted on our sites is visible from other sites and we get content from other sites to interact with on our sites. Someone in a federated forum about cars may browse programming posts on their cars site and comment from there and we may do the same to them.
- Makes users from our sites not be able to see things such as posts and comments from users on that instance.
- Makes users from that instance no longer be able to interact with communities or users on our sites in a way thats visible outside of their instance.
- Instances may be defederated if they break our [Code of Conduct](https://legal.programming.dev/docs/code-of-conduct) whether though encouraging something we disallow or not moderating users that break it.
- Instances that have no active administrators may be defederated.
- Instances that have a lack of security that is not addressed and that puts our users at risk may be defederated. This includes things like having a sign up process that does not stop bots from mass creating accounts.
- Instances that have defederated from us may be defederated to prevent one way conversations where we get content from the other instance but users commenting on that content get no response.
If you are the admin of an instance we have defederated, you wish to reverse the defederation, and you follow our [Code of Conduct](https://legal.programming.dev/docs/code-of-conduct) contact us as info@programming.dev.
We may update the Defederation Policy from time to time. When we do the date at the bottom of the page will change to indicate the date of the most recent changes. In addition, clicking on that date will bring you to the commit in the code repository that shows who edited it, and what was changed. If we make changes we may notify you by posting a notice of such changes in our meta community on the programming.dev site, in the updates account on the bytes.programming.dev site, in our blog on the stacks.programming.dev site, in the news community in our discord server, and in the news community in our matrix server. We encourage you to review the Defederation Policy periodically for any modifications.