#StatusNet
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
Ett tillhåll för minoriteter och nördar - Fediversums historia
Fediversum var länge ett tillhåll för minoriteter och nördar. I begynnelsen fanns OStatus som en standard för federerade kommunikationsnätverk. Det var ett sätt att beskriva hur en räcka öppna protokoll som Atom, Activity Streams, WebSub, Salmon och WebFinger kunde användas för att olika sajter skulle kunna utbyta meddelanden. 2010 byggdes programvaran StatusNet kring detta protokoll. 2012…
0 notes
Text
Fediverse: Abseits von Text im Stream Tobias erzählt hier ein wenig über die anderen schicken Fediverse-Projekten, die zur Abwechslung mal nicht textorientiert sind. :thumbs up:
0 notes
Text
On the subject of Connecting Federated Social Media Networks

The past few days on the Fediverse have served to remind me a few things:
The internet is as smart and as ignorant (and everything in between) as the macrocosm known as “human civilization” reflects upon it.
Sometimes the victims will become the victimizers in any given situation, usually without them being aware of it.
Upon pointing it out to said type above, instead of working to acknowledge and understand, they will double-down under the guise of righteousness, again unwittingly using the exact playbook that they had been persecuted under at some point in the past.
As usual, any attempt by a rational third party to diffuse whatever situation breaking out on the internet will lead to a wider conflict/argument/brigade session where everyone winds up digging their heels in and missing entirely the point.
And finally, as usual, there’s a 95% chance it was started by someone who was all to ready to be triggered by anything and everything so they could start some shit on the internet at that moment.
OK, with that preamble out the way, let’s get into the latest drama related iconically to trying to bridge this patchwork, fledgling open social media landscape. As you may be aware, there are two federated decentralized social media protocols that are pretty big right now; ActivityPub and ATProto. Per my previous notes on both:
ActivityPub is a federated social networking protocol that enables users to interact across different servers and platforms used by popular projects like Mastodon, Pleroma, and PeerTube. It’s been around since 2017 and is born from previous projects like Statusnet and Ostatus. It’s in full federation right now, mainly serving as the underpinning to Mastodon, a microblogging server.
ATProto is a newer protocol developed by Bluesky, a public benefit company born from the ideas from former Twitter engineers. The protocol’s main advantage is that it provides true account portability and can scale up with search and discovery. Since it was originally developed to be the successor to Twitter, it also has hooks for composable moderation and algorithms. It’s not federated at the moment, but the only instance using it, the self-titular Bluesky (bsky.app) says “its immenent. Indeed, the company just took down the waitlist and opened up registration to everyone worldwide a few weeks ago.
Bluesky takes the velvet rope down 🦋
Bluesky has opened up and requires no waitlist now, so if you were searching for a Twitter alternative, then here you go: Once registered, find me here: For reference: FeatureBlueskyActivityPub/Mastod…

So what the hell happened?
In short, someone built something that can connect both networks together in a sense and a bunch of people who likely don’t really know the technology’s underpinnings instead proceeded to blow up their victim status to trigger everyone else and brigade the developer who was asking for constructive dialoge and ideas before he got too far in the development process.

snarfed.org
snarfed.org
Fediverse! I’ve been building a bridge to Bluesky, and they’re turning on federation soon, which means my bridge will be available soon too. You’ll be able to follow people on Blu…
Now I must note, I’ve been using Ryan’s Bridgy site and suite of crossposting tools ever since I got into the Indieweb movement as it ticks all my boxes for making my content go all over the web and whatever comments and discussions take place out there, I can track and archive them on my site without worrying if I’ll get taken down, or the site goes dark. Bridgy already has bridges for Mastodon, Reddit, Facebook, and even supported Instagram and Twitter before they became… drunk with power. I am eagerly awaiting the day when I can sit on Bluesky and follow Mastodon folks or sit on Mastodon and comment on Bluesky posts… Or better yet, tag everyone in both places from this blog right here. ActivityPub and ATProto are open source and its pretty easy to make tools like this unlike feeling around in the dark with undocumented APIs that may get shut down at any second; That’s why we can’t do this with Instagram!
It’s no secret the fediverse is the social media of choice for those who feel voiceless and vulnerable on the other “big” networks; you can gain a sense of community and comradery on an instance with others sharing the same experiences. However, it is still a social network.
Social: relating to or involving activities in which people spend time talking to each other or doing enjoyable things with each other.
Network: a system of devices, or entities including people and animals that are connected and can communicate with each other.
So in regard to having a bridge to connect the two together… Yeah, it’s kind of a no-brainer and I thought everyone else was looking forward to having it like myself. Boy was I wrong:
You need to make this opt IN not opt OUT. It absolutely fucking sucks that you want to force the majority of decentralized posts here into content for Jack fucking Dorsey.
Cyrus (still a bit spooky tbh) (@[email protected])
honestly fuck you. Do you really expect everybody to have enough space in their bios to opt-out of your fucking bs? How many opt-out bs am I supposed to put there?
Joshix 🦣 (@[email protected])

My Take:
I honestly don’t get the vitrolic knee-jerk posts I saw coming left and right from some corners of the fediverse, then I started noticing the pattern: It’s mostly people not understanding what the goals of both ActivityPub and ATProto are as a protocol and their equating it to Mastodon and Bluesky as “psudo-corporations” that have some level of control… And even perhaps Ryan’s attempt to bridge both protocols with free and open source software that is literally already working to bridge other social networks as I type this, as some imaginary invasion mob coming to victimize them on the internet. 😓
Allow me to say this as a member of a marginalized group of people in real life who has had my share of internet trolls come at me: (I’m a Black man from the USA, and I have yet to lose my Black Card, am a refugee repping #BlackTwitter into the Fediverse on both Bsky and Masto so I think I can speak on some things.)
Get out of your feelings. The animosity is unwarranted and uncalled for. This is the internet and it wasn’t designed for you to have your entire-ass identity tied to it. This is truely the reason social media is some bullshit sometimes. The internet is supposed to be a communication tool, not some MMORPG for y’all to live your whole existence. If anything, your IRL personality should extend INTO it, not the other way around. Dude could’ve just cut the bridge on, posted Github links and lol’d all the way to the way to the next project and there wouldn’t be much you or I could say; the fediverse has no Ts&Cs to violate!
Attempt to learn the technology before you postulate whatever opinions around it. Don’t come up with some off-the-cuff hot take on how you think the bridge is suddenly going to aim 3 million users of Network A at your posts on being a furry/inanimate-curious who happens to be in a cross-species relationship with a hubcap from a 1993 Chevy Corsica that happen to be publicly available on Network B. That’s not how network bridges work. Understand that whatever you’ve posted publicly anywhere is subject to someone reading it and deciding to give you a like or give a hateful comment. They don’t need a bridge to do it; they can already just make an account on the network you’re already on and fuck with you. It’s actually easier for them and less traceable!
We already have bridges now. Consider this post is on my own personal blog powered by WordPress. It’s being cross-posted POSSE-style to wherever you’re reading this or got referred from, whether it was through an automatic script, or I manually cut and pasted over. My blog is already acting as a bridge and there are many others like it. It’s been that way in the past, and someone was bound to create this technology. If it’s not @snarfed, then it’ll be someone else. But mark my words, it’s gonna happen.
Learn the difference between protocols and applications. Bluesky is an application on the ATProto protocol. Mastodon is an application on the ActivityPub protocol. Both are facets of the wider fediverse. Don’t conflate these things. This blog is an application on BOTH those protocols and also does webmentions and other cool things. Once ATProto is fully federated and opened, it’s only a matter of time before I can snag an ATProto plugin in the same manner as the ActivityPub one and have it not even need to rely on a “translator” like Bridgy for that part. (If I just lost you with the technobabble, now you see why it’s important to seek to understand this technology before reacting to some perceived threat.)
You’re not in a walled garden on the fediverse. You’re in the open and as such you more than anyone should understand and respect the right to choose. The power here is in your hands and you have the ability to block, but your right to do so ends at the tip of your own nose and doesn’t come anywhere near mine. Also realize both ActivityPub and ATProto were designed for openness first; if you seek privacy and isolation, then you need to grab Signal and create some rooms there with some buddies away from the open internet.
Assholes exist everywhere. Don’t conflate the tech of one place with the ability to keep bigots, fascists, bullys, and jackasses from your timeline. Moreover, don’t shoo away people that are trying to do things that are inevitable anyway from doing it correctly! Understand federation is going to happen with or without your input if not by this project, by someone else. There’s no hiding, there’s no “safe place” except the one you create and control yourself within or without these places.
Letting you connect to other people you care about is not unethical or immoral. You have a lot of options for whether you want to participate in the BS bridge–either by managing your follows directly, by blocking users from that domain, or by blocking the whole domain. This is how federation works. You have absolute control over who you interact with.
Evan Prodromou (@[email protected])
I’m approaching this line of thinking from my longtime use, contribution and propagation of FOSS/open-source software and the use of my actual social media of choice, the indieweb which is best summed up here:
The #IndieWeb is for everyone, everyone who wants to be part of the world-wide-web of interconnected people. The social internet of people, a network of networks of people, connected peer-to-peer in human-scale groups, communities of locality and affinity.
tantek.com
Also, one more thing:
The most important lesson, I’ve ever learned about online privacy is this one: If you want something to be private online, don’t put it online in the first place.
DavidB (@DavidBHimself)
📡🔀
bsky
0 notes
Text
"Big Fedi vs Small Fedi" by Evan Prodomou.
Read: Big Fedi, Small Fedi – Evan Prodromou's Blog
The "Big Fedi - Small Fedi" problem sounds to me a lot like the "Big Endian - Small Endian" problem, or "Emacs versus Vi".
Big, important, intractable differences in opinion on the part of some very, very passionate nerds, but ultimately meaningless or even somewhat harmfully-gatekeeping for most "normies".
To be clear: Evan's initial analysis is very sound, and I fully support his classification. And yes Evan even specifically specifies in his blog post that these are not hard & fast two-sided classifications, there's a lot more nuance out there in the field.
And the "big fedi small fedi" dicothomy is useful to know of, particularly when nerds begin demonizing each other over whether Threads or Bluesky or Mastodon each are and/or are collectively "evil" or not.
...
Also Evan was the author of Laconica/StatusNet, software that essentially was the precursor to OStatus, GNUSocial, and (the recently popular because of Threads by Meta and, before that, Mastodon) ActivityPub.
0 notes
Text
#1yrago Facebook Domination vs. Self-Determination
We're months removed from the Cambridge Analytica scandal and the public outrage of #DeleteFacebook, and new information continues to surface about Facebook's sloppy handling of data and hunger for surveillance. Last month, we learned about an Orwellian patent that might allow Facebook to track you via mobile microphone. Though some have cast doubt on the reports, mobile spyware like the now-infamous Alphonso do track mobile devices via sound emitted by TVs.
Yale Privacy Lab has been warning about proximity tracking via mobile sensors and microphones, and Exodus Privacy's excellent scanner will help you find nasty trackers that utilize similar spy methods. The only way to really dodge Facebook's lidless eye, however, is jumping ship from the social network to a privacy-respecting replacement.
There is no shortage of alternatives, but you won't find surveillance sanctuary in Facebook-owned Instagram or ad-powered, centralized networks like Nextdoor. Instead, you'll have to jump into the "Fediverse", a constellation of Free and Open-Source Software (FOSS) replacements.
Mastodon is the fastest-growing of the FOSS social stars, and its links to the rest of the Fediverse are strengthened by the new ActivityPub standard. In a recent blog post, lead developer Eugen Rochko (@Gargron) sums it up nicely: "The social network that is Mastodon isn't really Mastodon. It's bigger. It's any piece of software that implements ActivityPub. That software can be wildly different in how it looks and what it does! But the social graph - what we call the people and their connections - is the same."
Are we really witnessing the origin of an all-new, all-different social Web? For deeper insight into the Fediverse, read my short interview with Eugen, below.
What is Mastodon and how is it different from social networks such as Facebook and Twitter?
Mastodon is a decentralized social network that uses standard interoperability protocols and is completely [FOSS]. What this means is that anyone can run a Mastodon server, and the users of those servers can talk to each other. More than that, non-Mastodon servers are also part of this network if they conform to the same protocols. This means that Mastodon is more future-proof than Facebook or Twitter: Even if Mastodon-the-software falls out of fashion, the network can be simply continued by other interoperable software. You don't have to tear out your entire social graph to have all friends migrate to something new if that happens. Furthermore, Mastodon allows self-determination and control. When you run a server, it's yours. Your rules, your community, hosted on your hardware... you don't depend on anybody, definitely not on a [Silicon Valley headquarters]. There are a lot of other differences to Facebook and Twitter too.
Where did Facebook go wrong as far as privacy is concerned? How can federated social networks do better?
Facebook is a vacuum for private information. It uses dark UX patterns to solicit every detail of your life from you, but also from your friends. It also builds shadow profiles about people even if they don't use the platform, through e.g. the contact books that people let it access, or from social sharing buttons on random websites. It's quite easy NOT to do that. If you don't intend to advertise to people then you don't need to know everything about them. Mastodon lets you broadcast messages to the public and to your friends, but there is no incentive to convince you to reveal more than necessary. The format of Mastodon is a lot closer to Twitter and Instagram than Facebook specifically, but I think that's a detail of decoration. Facebook replaced MySpace, and they were different formats as well. It doesn't have to be the same thing to be an alternative.
What is unique about federated social networks? Where can they improve upon Facebook and the traditional social networking models?
Federation is key. In my opinion it's one of the most ideal forms of decentralization, and it can be found in many real-world institutions. There is no single point of failure and top-down authority like in a centralized system, communities can spring up by themselves, just like in the old days of the Internet... except now they are interoperable, so content can travel freely between them. And unlike peer-to-peer solutions of decentralization, some issues are avoided, such as having to encounter and moderate all bad content on your own (instead, servers have mods, and your server neighbours can help with reports), or having to be online to receive messages (the server is the one being online), or synchronization between devices.
What can we do about audio, video, and multimedia, to make publishing and sharing of these formats federated and decentralized?
Mastodon allows images and videos up to a certain size limit. The servers cache this content so end-users are not hotlinked to another server, this saves the origin server's bandwidth and protects end-users from leaking their IP address to a different server. Of course, this approach brings challenges when file sizes grow. PeerTube, a federated video sharing platform, takes a different approach by using WebTorrent (BitTorrent over the browser). This does reveal the end-users' IP addresses to other end-users who are watching the video, but bandwidth costs for the origin server are lowered and other servers don't have to download and cache large files. A very similar approach to that is using IPFS. With IPFS, servers can cache large files (essentially also using a form of the BitTorrent protocol), and end-users can either peer with the IPFS network directly or use a gateway server to view the content.
How has the Facebook "scandal" affected federated social networks so far?
With growth and press attention, so quite positively. Privacy-minded people have been ringing the alarm bells about Facebook for years, but right now is when this idea is entering the mainstream.
Can Mastodon avoid the same pitfalls/errors as Facebook?
I think so, and I wouldn't be here otherwise. We have to be careful and thoughtful about our design decisions, but many of the fundamental differences between the platforms are reassuring.
How does Mastodon stand out, improve upon, or interop with the various social media projects of the past (StatusNet/GNU Social, Diaspora, Friendica, etc.)?
Mastodon begun as an OStatus implementation (this is the protocol that StatusNet/GNU Social implement), but it was quite dated and lacking in features, and OStatus never left the draft stage to become an official standard. So halfway through 2017 we performed an upgrade to the newer ActivityPub, which would, after our implementation, become a W3C-recommended standard. PeerTube, Hubzilla, Friendica and MissKey are some of the other softwares that implement ActivityPub. Support for ActivityPub in GNU Social has been planned, as far as I am aware. Furthermore, people are working on other implementations, such as Kroeg, Rustodon and Funkwhale.
Mastodon differents from GNU Social in having more privacy-oriented features, more moderation tools, a simpler/elegant API for client apps, a real-time streaming API, better content discovery mechanisms, and a more attractive user experience. Friendica and Hubzilla have a quite different user experience to Mastodon. Diaspora is the one big-name project that is completely incompatible with Mastodon because they use their own protocol rather than ActivityPub.
Where do we go from here (standards, interoperability, etc.)?
ActivityPub is already a W3C-recommended standard! And I am proud to see more and more implementations spring up. It's a really generic protocol that can support many different use cases of social networks. Microblogging, photo sharing, event planning, video hosting, it's all possible and beautifully interoperable. Ironically, perhaps ActivityPub is the thing that will truly "connect the world", rather than Facebook who that catchphrase belongs to.
https://boingboing.net/2018/07/18/platform-independence.html
22 notes
·
View notes
Text
Friendica Federation/Fediverse Statistic Momentan kennt dieser Knoten 4.226 Knoten mit insgesamt 2.558.623 registrierten Nutzern, die die folgenden Plattformen verwenden: #Friendica (375/14255) #diaspora (305/672293) #red (8/92) #hubzilla (255/6495) #GNU Social (142/13119) #StatusNet (9/81) #Mastodon (2704/1829557) #Pleroma (421/21609) #socialhome (4/906) #ganggo (3/216) #Federation #Statistic #Fediverse #WeAreFamily #JoinFediverse
#diaspora#Federation#Fediverse#Friendica#ganggo#GNU#hubzilla#JoinFediverse#Mastodon#Pleroma#red#socialhome#Statistic#StatusNet#WeAreFamily
0 notes
Text
> # Announcing Debian Social > ### https://lists.debian.org/debian-devel-announce/2020/03/msg00008.html > > To: [email protected] > Subject: Announcing Debian Social > From: Rhonda D'Vine <[email protected]> > Date: Thu, 19 Mar 2020 23:59:48 +0100 > Message-id: <[🔎] [email protected]> > Mail-followup-to: [email protected] > > ## Introduction > ############### > > The Debian Social Team maintains a variety of services under the > debian.social domain. These services aim to make it easier for Debian > contributors to share content and collaborate. > - https://wiki.debian.org/Teams/DebianSocial > > Here are some examples of services that the Debian Social Team intend to run: > > * Pleroma, a federated microblogging platform. Similar to Mastodon, Gnu Social > and Statusnet. > * Peertube, a federated video publishing platform. Debian contributors can use > this to share content like howtos, interviews, podcasts, etc. It will also > be a friendly interface for browsing and viewing the DebConf videos and from > other Debian meetings. > * Pixelfed, a federated image publishing platform. This is a friendly and > modern site that makes it easier to share photos at Debian events where they > can be easily found by other Debianites (as apposed to Signal, WhatsApp, > Facebook, Instagram which has sadly become a norm for those). > * Jitsi meet, a web-based videoconferencing site (currently needs no > authentication). > > Federation means that these services can communicate with other instances on > the Internet. From a pleroma account, you can follow videos on peertube or > images on pixelfed, or other accounts anywhere in the fediverse and leave > comments on them. Not only can they interface with other instances of the same > software, but also with completely different software (if based on > ActivityPub.) > > Here's a nice video that explains both Peertube and the Fediverse: > - https://peertube.debian.social/videos/watch/c008c78b-3c9a-44bc-bf86-6d2039a1acc4 > > > ## How to get an account on debian.social services > ################################################## > > It's still early days for us and there's still a lot of work that needs to be > done. If you're a brave soul who doesn't mind occasional errors, crashes, > explosions and even (brace yourself...) spelling mistakes, then you can help us > test these services before we open then up for wider beta testing. > > Long-term, we plan to authenticate these services against the salsa.debian.org > service. Some services are part of the way there, others may take some more > time and collaboration with upstream. > > In the meantime, you can request an account for one or more of the services by > creating a ticket in salsa.debian.org: > - https://salsa.debian.org/debiansocial-team/sysadmin/accounts/issues/new > You need a salsa account in order to do this, your username on Debian > Social platforms will match your salsa account. We'll gradually add > accounts as we feel more confident in the service on a first come, first > serve basis. > > > ## More information > ################### > > * For the most up-to-date information, see our wiki page: > https://wiki.debian.org/Teams/DebianSocial > * If you need some help, try us on #debian-social (but please be patient, > we're not always there and usually very busy) > > > ## Current Known issues we aim to resolve before entering a proper beta phase > ############################################################################# > > * We're still working on moderation policies, CoC text on sites, etc. > If you'd like to help with moderation, please join our IRC channel > and tell us so! > * Server load is currently higher than normal, we're just about to > finish importing all the last Debconf videos into the Peertube > instance > * Pleroma has some suggestive images that we'd rather remove > * Peertube gives an internal server error when you upload an avatar > that contains transparency > * We still need to figure out how to deal with some GDPR style requests > better. For example, if a user requests a copy of all their data. For > now we expect such requests to be few enough that we can deal with > them manually. > * Various small CSS issues > > We hope that some of our work might be useful to you, > > - Debian Social Team
#debian #gnu #linux #gnu-linux #social #media #cc #copyleft #federation #distros #mailing-list #pleroma #microblogging #mastodon #gnusocial #gnu-social #statusnet #peertube #debconf #deb #pixelfed #signal #whatsapp #wa #facebook #instagram #jitsi
original post
0 notes
Text
Sites Tracking the Fediverse of Federated Social Network Sites
https://fediverse.kranglabs.com/ – tracks servers which use GNU social and its predecessor StatusNet https://the-federation.info/ – tracks servers which use Diaspora*, Friendica, Hubzilla and Socialhome https://instances.social/ – tracks servers which use Mastodon These sites are very useful for tracking the user growth of federated, decentralized social networks as well as their geographic…
View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
I have a new follower on Twitter!
bone_idol Here for the #lulz I prefer to be found on statusnet http://bit.ly/2wY2Ca7 #trans #queer #me #me #me http://bit.ly/2h4iy0E Following: 302 - Followers: 144 September 14, 2017 at 06:55AM via Twitter http://twitter.com/bone_idol
0 notes
Text
Att skriva om Fediversum innebär att läsa en massa
Jag skrev tidigare om att det är nödvändigt att testa en massa saker för att kunna skriva ordentligt om Fediversum. Dessutom. Att skriva om Fediversum innebär att läsa en massa. Det betyder att en får en insikt om att det är en ganska begränsad grupp personer som utvecklat det vi idag kallar Fediversum. Och att det finns långvariga intressekonflikter och olika uppfattningar mellan och bland en…
View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
Ich habe einige Daten aktualisiert. Wem es interessiert?
Die unvollständige Geschichte des Fediverse
02. Juli 2008: Identi.ca, powered by OMB (OpenMicroBlogging-Protokoll) geht online (später umbenannt in StatusNet, GNU Social). Die erste öffentlich eingeführte föderierte Softwareplattform.
01. Juli 2010: Friendica, powered by DFRN (Distributed Friends and Relations Network) wird veröffentlicht (Mistpark während der Entwicklung und Friendika zum Launch). Es bindet im weiteren Verlauf bereits verschiedene Netze des Fediverse ein, sowie kommerzielle Plattformen wie Facebook, Twitter & später Google-Plus.
23. September 2010: Diaspora, (powered by diaspora*). Diaspora ist ein Community-getriebenes föderiertes, dezentrales Netzwerk.
2010 One - Network - The Federation: Friendica, Diaspora (später Hubzilla) bilden ein gemeinsames Netzwerk "One - Network - The Federation". Damit ist es der Vorläufer des heutigen Fediverse.
2010 - 2012 wurde der Begriff #Fediverse erstmals geprägt, um die markenbasierte Terminologie identiverse (basierend auf identi.ca) zu ersetzen.
22. März 2011: OStatus, dabei handelt es sich um eine Sammlung von offenen Protokoll Standards wie Atom, RSS, ActivityStreams, PupSubHubbub, Salmon und Webfinger. OStatus ermöglicht die föderierte Kommunikation zwischen verschiedenen Netzwerkdiensten.
15. Juli 2014: Pump.io wird als Protokoll gelauncht und später in Identi.ca verwendet.
2014: Das W3C gründet die ActivityPub-Protokollarbeitsgruppe. Basierend auf ActivityStreams 2.0 wird ActivityPup als Hauptprotokoll für föderierte Netzwerke im Fediverse konzipiert.
Dezember 2015: Hubzilla, powered by ZOT wird gelauncht. Es handelt sich um eine Abspaltung von Friendica, mit dem Ziel weitere starke Datenschutzwerkzeuge zur Verfügung zu stellen, sowie eine hohe Ausfallsicherheit zu realisieren, in dem eine "Nomadische Identität" die Kopplung des Nutzerprofils an eine Instanz aufgelöst.
05. Oktober 2016: Mastodon, powered by OStatus wird auf Hacker News öffentlich bekannt gemacht.
Juli 2017: Hubzilla kündigt die Unterstützung des neuen ActivityPub-Protokoll Protokolls an. Zot bleibt weiterhin das interne Protokoll.
September 2017: Mastodon kündigt die Unterstützung des neuen ActivityPub-Protokoll an und ersetzt das bis dahin verwendete OStatus. Für eine Übergangszeit werden beide Protokolle bedient.
23. Januar 2018 AcitivtyPub, hat offiziell die „W3C-Empfehlung“ erreicht (auch bekannt als gestarteter, stabiler, endgültiger, empfohlener Standard)
31 März 2018: PeerTube, powered by ActivityPub und WebTorrent spezialisiert sich auf das Verteilen von Videodateien.
23. April 2018: Funkwhale, powered by ActivityPub fokussiert sich auf das Verteilen von Audiodateien.
****01. Juli 2018: Pixelfed, powered by ActivityPub spezialisiert sich auf das Teilen von Bildern.
November 2018: Friendica unterstützt neben OStatus, diaspora*, Pump.io, DFRN, Atom, RSS, E-Mail zusätzlich ActivityPub.
02. Oktober 2019: Mastodon deaktiviert mit der Version 3.0 die OStatus Unterstützung
Oktober 2022: Streams powered by Nomad wird ZOT mittelfristig in Hubzilla ersetzen und verbindet die nomatische Identität mit ActivityPub.
Juni 2023: Friendica etabliert eine Brücke zu Bluesky und ermöglicht so die Kommunikation zwischen Bluesky und Friendica Nutzenden.
Juli 2023: META stellt mit Threads eine Twitter Alternative vor, die ActivityPub unterstützen wird und mit dem Fediverse kompatibel zusammen arbeitet.
13. Dezember 2023: META aktiviert in Threads Activitiy Pub. Die Implementierung soll im Laufe des Jahres 2024 abgeschlossen werden.
Quelle: https://c.im/users/youronlyone mit Ergänzungen durch https://loma.ml/profile/feb
0 notes
Text
Scripts and PlugIn for Websites
Philemonday Agency recommends tools, scripts and plug-ins to build your website. We list here more than 390 scripts that we had the opportunity to use during our missions of creation of website. We work on all of these scripts :
4images
Aardvark Topsite
AbanteCart
AbanteCart
Admidio
Adminer
Advanced Guest..
Advanced Poll
AEF
Agora-Project
AJAX Chat
AlegroCart
Ampache
AmpJuke
Anchor
appRain
Arastta
Arfooo
ArticleSetup
ATutor
Avactis
Axis
b2evolution
bbPress
Beatz
Beehive
BellaBook
BlaB
BlackNova Trad..
Blesta
Bludit
Bolt
Booked
Bootstrap
BoxBilling
Brushtail
Bugs
Burden
CakePHP
ccMail
Chamilo
Chevereto Free
Chive
Chyrp
CJ Dynamic Poll
Claroline
ClientExec
ClipBucket
ClipperCMS
CMS Made Simple
CMSimple
CodeIgniter
Codiad
Collabtive
Commentics
Composr
Concrete5
Contao
Coppermine
Cotonti
Croogo
CubeCart
CubeCart
CumulusClips
Dada Mail
DIY
DoceboLMS
Dokeos
DokuWiki
Dolibarr
Dolphin
Dolphin
DomainMOD
Dotclear
dotProject
Drupal
e107
EasyPoll
EC-CUBE
eFront
eggBlog
EGroupware
Elgg
ElkArte
EPESI
EspoCRM
eSyndiCat
Etano
Eventum
ExoPHPDesk
ExtCalendar
eXtplorer
eyeOS
Family Connect..
Faveo Helpdesk
Feed On Feeds
Feng Office
Fiyo CMS
FlatPress
FluxBB
Flyspray
Fork
Form Tools
FreshRSS
FrontAccounting
FUDforum
FuelPHP
Fusio
Gallery
Geeklog
Ghost
Gibbon
GLPI
GNU social
GPixPixel
GRAV
Gregarius
Group Office
Hablator
Help Center Li..
HelpDeskZ
HelpDEZk
HESK
Hotaru CMS
HTML Purifier
HTMLy
HumHub
iGalerie
Impleo
ImpressCMS
ImpressPages
InfiniteWP
Invoice Ninja
InvoicePlane
iQDesk
Jamroom
jCore
Jcow
jobberBase
JoobsBox
Joomla
Joomla
Jorani
Kanboard
Kimai
Kirby
Kliqqi
Kohana
Koken
Kopage
kPlaylist
Laravel
Lazarus
LetoDMS
LifeType
LimeSurvey
LiteCart
Little Softwar..
LittlePoll
Live helper ch..
Loaded Commerce
Logaholic
Logic Invoice
LuxCal
Lychee
Magento
Mahara
Maian Support
Mambo
Mantis Bug Tra..
Mautic
MediaWiki
Mibew Messenger
Microweber
miniBB
MODX
Monsta FTP
Monstra
Moodle
Movable Type
Multiplayer Ch..
my little forum
MyBB
MyBB
MyWebSQL
Nextcloud
Nibbleblog
Nucleus
Omeka
Open Blog
Open Business ..
Open Conferenc..
Open eShop
Open Journal S..
Open Monograph..
Open Real Estate
Open Real Estate
Open Source Po..
Open Source So..
Open Web Analy..
OpenBiblio
OpenBiz Cubi
OpenCart
OpenDocMan
OpenNewsletter
OrangeHRM
OSClass
osCmax
osCommerce
osTicket
ownCloud
Oxwall
PageCookery
Pagekit
PASTE
PEEL SHOPPING
PeoplePods
PERL
pH7CMS
Phorum
PHP Address Bo..
PHP QR Code
PHP-Fusion
PHP-Nuke
phpAlbum
phpBB
phpBB
phpBook
phpCOIN
phpCollab
PHPDevShell
phpDocumentor
phpESP
PHPfileNavigat..
phpFormGenerat..
phpFreeChat
PhpGedView
phpicalendar
PHPKode Guestb..
phpLD
phpList
phpLiteAdmin
phpMyAdmin
phpMyFAQ
phpOnline
PHProjekt
phpwcms
PHPWeby
Pimcore
PivotX
Piwigo
Piwik
Pixelpost
Pixie
Plogger
Pluck
PluXml
PmWiki
Podcast Genera..
poMMo
PopojiCMS
Postfix Admin
PRADO
Precurio
PrestaShop
PrestaShop
Prismotube Exp..
Privacy Policy..
ProcessWire
ProjectPier
ProjectSend
PunBB
Pydio
PyroCMS
qdPM
Question2Answer
Quick.Cart
Quick.CMS
RainLoop Webma..
razorCMS
Reader Self
Redaxscript
Revive Adserver
RicarGBooK
RockMongo
Roundcube
Rukovoditel
Sales Syntax
Saurus
SCHLIX CMS
SeedDMS
selfoss
Sentrifugo
Seo Panel
SeoToaster CMS
SeoToaster Eco..
Serendipity
Shadows Rising
ShopSite
Shopware
SIDU
Silex
SilverStripe
Simple PHP Poll
SimpleInvoices
SimplePie
SiteCake
SiteDove
Sitemagic CMS
SLiMS
Smarty
SMF
SMF
sNews
Snipe-IT
Soholaunch
SOPlanning
SPIP
SQLiteManager
SquirrelMail
StatusNet
Storytlr
Subrion
SugarCRM
SuiteCRM
SuperCali
Support Incide..
SurfShopCART
SVNManager
Symfony
TangoBB
TaskFreak
TCExam
TestLink
Textpattern
The Bug Genie
TheHostingTool
Thelia 2
Tiki Wiki CMS ..
Tine 2.0
Tiny Tiny RSS
TinyWebGallery
todoyu
TomatoCart
Traq
Trellis Desk
Typesetter
Typo3
u-Auctions
UIkit
Vanilla
videoDB
VidiScript
Vision Helpdesk
Vtiger
Vty
VX Guestbook
wallabag
Webasyst
WebCalendar
WebCollab
webERP
WeBid
Webinsta Maill..
WebMail Lite
Website Baker
webtrees
WHMCS
WHMCS
WideImage
WikkaWiki
Wolf CMS
WonderCMS
Word Search Pu..
WordPress
WordPress
X-Cart
X2CRM
XCloner
Xerte Online T..
XMB
XMS
Xoops
Yclas
YetiForce
YetiForce
yii
YOURLS
Zen Cart
Zenario
Zenbership
Zend
Zenphoto
ZenTao
Zeuscart
Zikula
Zurmo
More about :
http://philemonday.eu/pdf/Software_Tools_website_by_Philemonday_2017.pdf
0 notes
Link
Dezentrale Netzwerke helfen. #prism #statusnet #diaspora #friendica How to Block the NSA From Your Friends List

After recent revelations of NSA spying, it’s difficult to trust large Internet corporations like Facebook to host our online social networks. Facebook is one of nine companies tied to PRISM––perhaps the largest government surveillance effort in world history. Even before this story broke, many social media addicts had lost trust...
8 notes
·
View notes
Text
Momentan kennt dieser #Friendica Knoten 3199 Knoten mit insgesamt 1.989.719 registrierten Nutzern, die die folgenden Plattformen verwenden #WeAreFamily (Server/Benutzer) Friendica (339/12443) diaspora (235/666405) red (11/95) hubzilla (190/3597) GNU Social (180/16347) StatusNet (12/51) Mastodon (2021/1287809) pleroma (206/2263) socialhome (4/608) ganggo (1/101) #Fediverse #federation #Fedeverseration
0 notes
Text
Identi.ca Appears to be Down
% wget -O /dev/null identi.ca --2012-10-20 04:21:23-- http://identi.ca/ Resolving identi.ca... 50.57.205.237 Connecting to identi.ca|50.57.205.237|:80... connected. HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 500 Internal Server Error 2012-10-20 04:21:54 ERROR 500: Internal Server Error.
It's not just you! http://identi.ca looks down from here.
(Via http://www.downforeveryoneorjustme.com/.)
Can't find any posts saying there are any issues, though.
0 notes