As decentralized social networks become more popular, the way different protocols interact could set the stage for the future of the web.

  • @pan_troglodytes@programming.dev
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    103 months ago

    it seems like one of the key defining principals of the fediverse is platform evolution - mastodon, bluesky, and lemmy are just going to be footnotes in history.

    • kbal
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      123 months ago

      Whichever one you prefer (I’m on Pleroma’s side in this fight) ActivityPub is what’s here to stay.

    • @spaduf@slrpnk.net
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      23 months ago

      mastodon, bluesky, and lemmy are just going to be footnotes in history

      Only if they squander their lead. So long as they innovate in ways befitting the fediverse form, they will probably maintain their position. That said, it seems to me like modular systems like bonfire will probably leapfrog the existing platforms pretty quickly.

    • wakestOPM
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      03 months ago

      100% agree

  • @Ziggurat@sh.itjust.works
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    73 months ago

    Even though, I am not fan of “Everyone gets one bluesky without any consent” (and what happens to our data ?). Having activity pub as a way to communicate between bluesky and Threads really limit what these big evil actor can do to the fediverse.

    One “evil actor” having 10 times more use as the fedi is dangerous, having 2 bigs actors 10 bigger than the rest of the fedi, seems to somehow limit the risk. Feel like the feature might more be used by Threads people to talk with bluesky than by Mastodon people to talk with Threadsky

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    53 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Software developer Ryan Barrett found this out the hard way when he set out to connect the AT Protocol and ActivityPub with a bridge called Bridgy Fed.

    Barrett planned to make the bridge opt-out by default, meaning that public Mastodon posts could show up on Bluesky without the author knowing, and vice versa.

    In what one Bluesky user called “the funniest github issue page i have ever seen,” there was a heated debate over the opt-out default, which — like any good internet argument — included unfounded legal threats and devolved into bizarre personal attacks.

    As a nonprofit, Mastodon’s appeal is that, unlike Instagram or Twitter or YouTube, it’s not controlled by a big corporation that needs to make its investors happy.

    The ideological issues around Bridgy Fed are likely to continue stoking tension across these federated social networks as they increase their connection points.

    “I am thinking and feeling deeply that however content moderation works on either side of the bridge, it needs to be at least as good as it is for native fediverse users, and vice versa,” Barrett said.


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