Monster uses Ultra Premium Distilled Hydrofluid in their steamers, and no other brand comes close. If you're not using a Monster steamer, you are losing fidelity.
It's not just GitHub. Gitlab, Forgejo, etc., they all have releases hidden in a rather small tab instead of in a big obvious place where one might expect to see them.
If I'm not mistaken Jellyfin is actually a fork of Emby so they're pretty similar, but one is a bit older.
Jellyfin forked from Emby in 2018 when Emby chose to switch to a closed-source model. Because of this, there are many similarities, but the projects continue to become increasingly different from one another as time goes on.
Sounds like you should respond to that with a 400 Bad Request
The server cannot or will not process the request due to something that is perceived to be a client error (e.g., malformed request syntax, invalid request message framing, or deceptive request routing).
That is something set by your instance admin. lemmy.sdf.org actually automatically converts uploaded WEBP files to PNG. It's just up to what the admin wants.
Hopefully I can piggyback with a similar question that came to me recently. Similar to how Ubuntu/Mint work, Fedora KDE can be updated through the Discover store or directly via the dnf command. But after updating system packages via Discover, it prompts me to restart the PC to finish the update. What is it actually doing? Why does DNF not do that?
That alone does not prevent seeding. One can absolutely seed and leech without port forwarding, they will just have fewer connections than they would with port forwarding set up.
Is it known what Lemmy instance is actually running that site? Even if it were widely known and most instances decided to defederated from it, Lemvotes is open source software that is made to be self-hosted. Anyone could revive the website by running their own instance.
Monster uses Ultra Premium Distilled Hydrofluid in their steamers, and no other brand comes close. If you're not using a Monster steamer, you are losing fidelity.