The way you shared the links IS already the official Federated way to do it.
https://fedi.tips/what-are-original-pages-in-mastodon/ “Just copy and paste the page’s web address into the search box on Mastodon/Lemmy/etc, and it will make that post or profile appear within your own server where you will be able to interact with it directly.”
How would we use your link? We go to the search page. In your web browser, look for a search icon at the top right of the page. On mobile, you may need to open up a context menu to find the search icon. You can probably just go to https://yourservername/search and get the same search page.
Copy your link and paste it into the search box, then press on the Search button. To save time for the future, you can make a bookmark to the search page.
@nutcase2690@lemmy.dbzer0.com has an interesting suggestion for using a central server. One risk could be if the central server tracks users, then we would send everyone through an extra layer of tracking. Let us look at that server’s hosting.
https://hosting-checker.net/websites/lemmyverse.link
It seems lemmyverse.link is hosted on one of the top tracking websites.
https://www.ghostery.com/whotracksme/tracking-reach
Maybe someone can point the person who runs that website at this thread and ask that person to migrate to a different host.
“Privacy researchers at the Mozilla Foundation in September warned in a report that “modern cars are a privacy nightmare,” noting that 92 percent give car owners little to no control over the data they collect, and 84 percent reserve the right to sell or share your information. (Subaru tells WIRED that it “does not sell location data.”)”
Such a statement about not selling data can be very misleading, because the essential statement of saying “we do not share your location data” does not seem to have been made! Please, let us stop falling for the trick of companies saying that they do not sell our data as somehow equating to them respecting our privacy, because it is not an equivalence.
“While we worried that our doorbells and watches that connect to the Internet
might be[are] spying on us, car brands quietly entered the data business by turning their vehicles into powerful data-gobbling machines,” Mozilla’s report reads.“People are being tracked in ways that they have no idea are happening.”
https://archive.is/9dIdu
“the minute you hook up your phone to Bluetooth, it automatically downloads all the information off your phone, which is sent back to the vehicle manufacturer.”
“if you want to protect the data on your phone, don’t connect it to the car.”