Only way I know to do this, is to just regularly check the comment and post feeds, loading more pages until you get content you've already ingested.
This is how @saucechan@ani.social works. It also responds to mentions using notifications, but mentions in post bodies don't create notifications, so the work-around was necessary.
If you didn't know, there is a comment feed endpoint, which will contain new comments from all posts, without requiring you to check every post for new comments. It's not used by most clients, but it's available in the default webUI, and hence the API.
You can make it a little simpler, by only loading the subscribed feed, and making sure you sub to the relevant communities on the bot account.
Making and running fediverse bots is very easy right now. The APIs are well documented and libraries exist for almost every platform and programming language to make things even simpler. All the parts you'd need for every bot anyway, are done and available. You only need to write the code that does what your specific use-case requires.
At the same time, it should have some barrier for entry.
If you need a piece of software to hold your hand every step of the way, you maybe shouldn't be responsible for a bot.
And it's not really something you can easily make general purpose software for. There is the RED bot for discord, but it is a huge project and still relies on user-created add-ons to do more specific things.
Right. Then I'll just open up your banking history here on lemmy...
Oh wait.
And words have meaning. You can't just point to their etymology and claim they can be used to refer to everything you consider slightly related.
The fact is, the word panopticon has very specific meaning, and specifically refers to prisons. And you didn't even get it right. The original concept doesn't involve constant surveillance, but the possibility of constant surveillance.
Otherwise every single room with someone wearing sunglasses in it, would be one, because you can't tell whether that person might be looking at you at any given moment.
Moderated social media is not a prison. Lemmy does not make your financial history public. It does not make your whatsapp, telegram or signal messages public. It does not point a camera at your physical body for all to view at all times.
A panopticon is a prison model where surveillance is possible at all times, and nothing is private.
Moderated social media, is not a prison, and is not mutually exclusive with 100% private conversation outside any given platform, between any two individuals, or within any given group of individuals.
The reason PUBLIC forums need to be moderated is that otherwise they devolve instead of develop conversation.
In the private sphere, the equivalent action taken to mediate conversation is the ability for you to simply stop conversing with a given individual, or for a group to ostracize individuals that sabotage discourse.
Once you reach a group of large enough size, ostracizing no longer works, and you individually blocking someone does not prevent them from derailing topics for everyone else.
Embracer was doing so well, just letting good studios do their thing.
Then they just completely shat the bed financially, bought up orders of magnitude more than they could afford, and got surprised when they had to sleep in it when money they didn't have, failed to materialize.
My guess it just doesn't evict stuff from before the suspend, starts re-loading stuff after the resume, which makes the apparent amount "used" go up.
On a normal linux system, "free" RAM will over time drop down to zero, as the kernel puts the extra memory available to use. But it doesn't mean there isn't room to evict less-needed stuff if necessary.
AFAIK linux only starts actively evicting RAM once it fills up.
Like the other guy mentioned, drill down and see if yiu can find the actual program causing the problem.
Now, I'm not familiar with Path of Exile, but isn't the game PvE?
The connection shouldn't matter, unless you're playing co-op.