cross-posted from: https://lemmy.zip/post/18019157

Once upon a time, in a galaxy not so far away (this one, in fact), a few internet rebels decided that they were tired of the corporate overlords controlling their online lives. Thus, the fediverse was born — an attempt to wrest control of microblogging services, such as Twitter and its ilk, away from centralized powers and into the hands of the people.

  • Otter
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    1 year ago

    The article is nice, but I’m not sure if I’d send it to friends that aren’t familiar with the fediverse. It seems to gloss over some problems and focus less relevant ones

    It doesn’t touch on the issues with Blueskys protocol and makes it sound like an equivalent choice (or worse, a better choice). In the downsides section it touches on racism in badly moderated instances, and the difficulty of setting up an instance. Those issues aren’t relevant to the vast majority of users who will join a large instance that has defederated from the bad stuff.

    It’s a nice article for those who are already somewhat familiar, but a bad first impression

    • jelloeater
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      21 year ago

      Yeah, I think alot of media outlets just don’t understand the fedi… Or much TBH 😂

  • @Sanctus@lemmy.world
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    101 year ago

    Fuck Bluesky for breaking interoperability before it even started. There was no reason to not use the open source protocol.

    • HEXN3T
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      21 year ago

      Why does it seem to be getting more traction than Mastodon? Makes no sense.

  • @fubarx@lemmy.ml
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    61 year ago

    Was just listening to the latest episode of Dot Social podcast where there was a discussion with CEO of Ghost (alternative to Substack). They’re integrating ActivityPub into the platform, but where they’re going with it is that you can use your Fediverse ID instead of email to sign up.

    Once they have that worked out, any likes or comments automatically migrate back to the fediverse. Replies back to replies also show up in your timeline and your followers can see them. This makes discovery pretty effortless. They can also use the stats to keep track of engagement across all fediverse services.

    It also means turning one-way streams like RSS (podcasting), email services, and commenting services into common two-way communities.

    You’re now going beyond just catching up to existing services and doing things just not possible in closed silos. Real “Aha!” moment.