[img=https://community.nodebb.org/assets/uploads/files/1754063515545-1000004314-resized.jpg]1000004314.jpg[/img]
Let's get this party started!
[strong]Day 1 of FediCon[/strong]
i don't think interop comes first. what is the goal? if the goal is explicitly to promote decentralization then yes you should define that term first. and decentralization is fundamentally a political goal while interop is fundamentally a utilitarian goal. for example: facebook has 2 billion users, so it clearly has some utility for some people. but it is politically unacceptable for other people, who will oppose it despite its utility. it is shortsighted to prioritize interop alone.
trwnh@mastodon.social I think what quillmatiq@mastodon.social is getting at is less that decentralization isn't important (because it is!) but more that UX friction is a surmountable barrier for adoption, and arguably more important now than later.
personally i find that interop can lead to worse UX if you have to compromise on your own experience to be compatible with someone else's assumptions. so improving UX might require explicitly breaking interop.
more generally, UX friction can be good, and good UX doesn't imply that the thing is good. putting decentralization first means you emphasize values -- do it right before you do it well. putting interop first means you defer the value judgement.
chris@socialbc.ca discussing his petition to the Government of Canada to adopt a free and open social media network for communication to all Canadians.
dawn@cosocial.ca makes the point that it's important that cosocial members buy at least the share into the coop so as to have a stake in the coop itself.
It's more of a commitment than just filling in a form.
I think the βMoosetodon Movementβ means more than just mstdn.ca, further solidified at #FediCon; a movement country wide to kick the Zuckerverse to the curb.
We still have a lot of work to do but I believe our small but mighty community is working toward that common goal.
TLDR; but if it's akin to a viable microparyment service, then let's use it to pay rights holders for their IP. It could be commission-free small amounts that are still greater than the royalties proprietary incumbents pay and could attract a critical mass through a/ better pay & b/ ethical tech. @reiver
On the Fediverse, the hard part is connecting the payment to the payment to the IP that you're purchasing. It means adding in a whole layer of identity and permissions that probably don't exist on most servers.
I believe sub.club managed this with a private "invite only" Mastodon feed, but we can go more granular than that.
I have a prototype working with #Emissary and Bandwagon.fm, and we'll need this tech on many more platforms to make a real difference.
Regardless of the payment method, itβs still extra work to figure out who has paid for which content, and most Fediverse servers donβt have this in place yet, so crypto wouldnβt solve that part of the puzzle.
Separate from that, Iβm pretty down on crypto - specifically because it seems like an end run around having a well-regulated banking system.
But Iβm willing to be open; is there a good reason to look into crypto payments BEFORE direct bank transfers?
Yes. I'm looking into Taler and Interleger (Open Payments) for direct fiat currency transfer.
And yes, payments are *very* different from how (most of) the Fediverse works right now.
There was an service called sub.club ~ which unfortunately shut down recently ~ that was experimenting with charging money for access to premium newsfeeds.
I'm doing that now with #Emissary, along with letting bands sell albums over Bandwagon.fm
I forget who caught me in the after party chaos and so wisely noted that Social Media != Social Network and among my FediUrbanism 2.0 revisions needs to be the idea that an online Social Network can possibly come closest to a true Third Space, but Social Media contains too many antithetical attributes.
I can't speak for Julian, but I can talk about my impressions from @boris 's presentation.
He went through a dozen different apps running on the ATProto network that create custom data types and interactions and distribute them through the network. It's all happening on the client side, so these new apps aren't their own PDS servers; they can concentrate on cool client experience and leave the distribution up to the back end.
This is almost exactly parallel to the ActivityPub API. It was cool seeing recipes, check-ins, images, events all being created and managed by server less web clients.
It definitely reenergized me for focusing on the ActivityPub API.
i can't really speak for anyone here as a relative outsider, but as someone that has worked with both protocols i think one big reason is the lack of a public, accessible, synchronous space for discussion, development, and support
the unofficial discord linked in that slide tends to be fairly active - i've managed to receive answers to most of my atproto-related questions there, and as a result i've been able to get stuff done relatively quickly. whenever i've had issues with activitypub projects in the past, i've just sat on them for long periods of time because i wasn't sure where to ask about them (and i never really got much response from posts i made on the network about them either)
i see socialhub as a great place for asynchronous, more formal happenings, but there's not much for more casual happenings right now afaict (though i'd love to be proven wrong in this regard!)
as someone who's also on the outside looking in, I kind of have to concur here. nobody's really having fun. even on socialhub, all I really see is just the same few people people getting really pedantic and argumentative over implementation details and whether rdf is good and where the bike shed for the nuclear reactor should be built. contrast atproto, where people can just be like "I built a toilet social network because it's funny."
I think that activitypub sorely needs more creativity and experimentation and people pushing the protocol in ways that are super unexpected, as well as having developers welcome new people on board and helping them get up to speed (and the casual discussion space that essem mentioned). doing this will probably bring a lot of much needed diversity and progress to the space imo
eblu@wetdry.world said in Fedicon Livestream: > even on socialhub, all I really see is just the same few people people getting really pedantic and argumentative over implementation details and whether rdf is good and where the bike shed for the nuclear reactor should be built. contrast atproto, where people can just be like "I built a toilet social network because it's funny."
I'd love to put some of my creative and cat-herding energies toward developing an implementor-first place for AP developer support. I often make the claim that AP-related discussion should take place over ActivityPub, so I'd love to put that into practice.
I'm not a chat-first person, so Discord isn't my first option, but there are other options...!
@esm @Gargron @julian as someone who's also on the outside looking in, I kind of have to concur here. nobody's really having fun. even on socialhub, all I re...
I'd love to put some of my creative and cat-herding energies toward developing an implementor-first place for AP developer support
Come help us with the reboot of SocialHub, this is and has always been the vision. I'm 100% on board with making SH more fun! I am after all a member of fediverse.party, and the creator of the Freudian Typo of the Week : P. How about some new categories specifically for new implementers to compare notes, or for things like novelty implementations? We're totally open to ideas. johannab:
Social Media != Social Network
It's hard to know what to make of this in the absence of definitions of each. From context, I'm guessing that for you Social Media = Datafarming corporate platforms, yes? How would you define Social Networks?
I tend to use both terms in their original usages (circa early 2000s). Where "social media" is open publishing with comments (blogging, vlogging, code forges with built-in bug tracking etc), so anyone can publish media and get rapid feedback. While "social network" covers any tool that enables regular interactions between people who know each other, 1:1 or in bounded groups (email, IM, group chat, web forums, link-sharing, etc).
By those definitions the current fediverse is a mixture of both. It's heavily weighted towards social media, but there's a lot of work being done to extend AP (in FRPs and SocialCG taskforces and elsewhere) so it can offer more social networking features.
To be clear, we don't disagree here, I'm just slicing the onion on a different angle
(Originally posted in response to @howβs announced ultimatum wrt the future of SocialHub.) Unless a community team steps up, SocialHub will cease to be ..
Itβs hard to know what to make of this in the absence of definitions of each.
I recentely tooted my definitions. Maybe they are useful to others:
My definition of social networking is: Any direct and indirect human interaction between people.
Social media then is a particular set of social networking use cases where people publish content to other people to interact with in a variety of ways.
In any case social media are but a small subset of social networking against these definitions.
My definition of social networking is: Any direct and indirect human interaction between people.
Social media then is a particular set of social networking use cases where people publish content to other people to interact with in a variety of ways.
Interesting. I usually see social networking defined as a subset of social media. The definition of a social network site that's usually referenced is from danah boyd and Nicole Ellison's 2007 paper on Social Network Sites: Definition, History, and Scholarship:
We define social network sites as web-based services that allow individuals to (1) construct a public or semi-public profile within a bounded system, (2) articulate a list of other users with whom they share a connection, and (3) view and traverse their list of connections and those made by others within the system. The nature and nomenclature of these connections may vary from site to site.
By this definition, email, blogs without blogrolls, Signal (where I can't view or traverse others lists of connections) are all examples of social media, but not social networks.
boyd and ellison also talk about the rise of social network sites, including noting that several well-known examples started as non-networked social media:
From 2003 onward, many new SNSs were launched, prompting social software analyst Clay Shirky (2003) to coin the term YASNS: "Yet Another Social Networking Service." Most took the form of profile-centric sites, trying to replicate the early success of Friendster or target specific demographics.... Furthermore, as the social media and user-generated content phenomena grew, websites focused on media sharing began implementing SNS features and becoming SNSs themselves. Examples include Flickr (photo sharing), Last.FM (music listening habits), and YouTube (video sharing).
Interesting. I usually see social networking defined as a subset of social media.
I am using these definitions in the context of social experience design, which starts looking at social networking solutions at a personal perspective. Here a person's 'social experience' starts when they wake up in the morning and social activities start to stream into their senses. I.e. it starts in the real world, offline, where technology fulfills only a supportive role in connecting people and social interactions.
Fair enough. boyd and Ellison are specifically talking about social network sites, the technological artifacts. In practice people sometimes use the term "social network" to refer to the network of people (and sometimes organizations) and their collections, and sometimes to refer to the technological artifact.
Jon P said in Fedicon Livestream: > nteresting. I usually see social networking defined as a subset of social media.
Indeed. This is how it's often used in the social sciences that study online activity. Social Networking Sites are sites like Facebook, that require account following, or even bidirectional follows, while "social media" is everything from BBSes to forums to blogs with comment sections to, well, Social Networking Sites.
Interesting. I usually see social networking defined as a subset of social media. The definition of a social network site that's usually referenced is from danah boyd and Nicole Ellison's 2007 paper on Social Network Sites: Definition, History, and Scholarship:
We define social network sites as web-based services that allow individuals to (1) construct a public or semi-public profile within a bounded system, (2) articulate a list of other users with whom they share a connection, and (3) view and traverse their list of connections and those made by others within the system. The nature and nomenclature of these connections may vary from site to site.
By this definition, email, blogs without blogrolls, Signal (where I can't view or traverse others lists of connections) are all examples of social media, but not social networks.
boyd and ellison also talk about the rise of social network sites, including noting that several well-known examples started as non-networked social media:
From 2003 onward, many new SNSs were launched, prompting social software analyst Clay Shirky (2003) to coin the term YASNS: "Yet Another Social Networking Service." Most took the form of profile-centric sites, trying to replicate the early success of Friendster or target specific demographics.... Furthermore, as the social media and user-generated content phenomena grew, websites focused on media sharing began implementing SNS features and becoming SNSs themselves. Examples include Flickr (photo sharing), Last.FM (music listening habits), and YouTube (video sharing).
julian
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evan@cosocial.ca fielding some real hardballs in this question session!
Topics have touched on protocol wars, blockchain, and authoritarian regimes π¬
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in reply to Anuj Ahooja • • •personally i find that interop can lead to worse UX if you have to compromise on your own experience to be compatible with someone else's assumptions. so improving UX might require explicitly breaking interop.
more generally, UX friction can be good, and good UX doesn't imply that the thing is good. putting decentralization first means you emphasize values -- do it right before you do it well. putting interop first means you defer the value judgement.
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j12t@j12t.social "now I realize I am standing between you and Lunch"
Poor Johannes, at FOSDEM he was standing between us and dinner, too.
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chris@mstdn.chrisalemany.ca talking about starting up SocialBC is inspiring!
Makes me wonder if something like this could happen in Ontario... esp. rural communities.
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boris@cosocial.ca giving us ATProto 101.
Good, I have no idea what any of this is.
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The number of interesting apps and services running off BlueSky is staggering.
Just. What.
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dansup@mastodon.social is on stage now!
Day 2 of FediCon begins...
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Am loving how benpate@mastodon.social is focusing on getting creators onto the fediverse. Important work to cross that chasm!
πΊ
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dawn@cosocial.ca presenting an interesting history of how coop@cosocial.ca came to be.
I love how both we have representation from both CoSocial.ca and SocialBC!
CoSocial
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dawn@cosocial.ca makes the point that it's important that cosocial members buy at least the share into the coop so as to have a stake in the coop itself.
It's more of a commitment than just filling in a form.
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johannab@cosocial.ca on Digital Third Spaces!
Back in the day forums were that digital third space. Social media took that over and they've dropped the ball.
Let's bring them back (with more forums obviously)
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Someone's got Mastodon open on their device with sound on and it keeps dinging, and I'm having a Pavlovian urge to check my phone.
I don't even use the Mastodon web app wth
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Congrats chad@mstdn.ca for winning the FediCon swag competition. Move over stickers here's a MUG.
cc evan@cosocial.ca
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in reply to John Francis π¦«π¨π¦ππͺβ¬οΈ • • •what a damn good looking mug!!
I think the βMoosetodon Movementβ means more than just mstdn.ca, further solidified at #FediCon; a movement country wide to kick the Zuckerverse to the curb.
We still have a lot of work to do but I believe our small but mighty community is working toward that common goal.
Paul Turnbull π¨π¦
in reply to julian • • •I have that mug!
@chad @evan
Greg
in reply to julian • • •@reiver
Ben Pate π€π»
in reply to Greg • • •Yes π―
On the Fediverse, the hard part is connecting the payment to the payment to the IP that you're purchasing. It means adding in a whole layer of identity and permissions that probably don't exist on most servers.
I believe sub.club managed this with a private "invite only" Mastodon feed, but we can go more granular than that.
I have a prototype working with #Emissary and Bandwagon.fm, and we'll need this tech on many more platforms to make a real difference.
Greg
in reply to Ben Pate π€π» • • •@julian @reiver
Ben Pate π€π»
in reply to Greg • • •Regardless of the payment method, itβs still extra work to figure out who has paid for which content, and most Fediverse servers donβt have this in place yet, so crypto wouldnβt solve that part of the puzzle.
Separate from that, Iβm pretty down on crypto - specifically because it seems like an end run around having a well-regulated banking system.
But Iβm willing to be open; is there a good reason to look into crypto payments BEFORE direct bank transfers?
@gregalotl @julian @reiver
Marcus Rohrmoser π»
in reply to Ben Pate π€π» • • •maybe #GNU_Taler can simplify transfers of assets, including fiat currencies. But isn't that orthogonal to messaging and #ActivityPub?
Ben Pate π€π»
in reply to Marcus Rohrmoser π» • • •Yes. I'm looking into Taler and Interleger (Open Payments) for direct fiat currency transfer.
And yes, payments are *very* different from how (most of) the Fediverse works right now.
There was an service called sub.club ~ which unfortunately shut down recently ~ that was experimenting with charging money for access to premium newsfeeds.
I'm doing that now with #Emissary, along with letting bands sell albums over Bandwagon.fm
@mro @gregalotl @julian @reiver
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Ben Pate π€π»
in reply to Ben Pate π€π» • • •That was the main point of my presentation at #Fedicon2025, that:
1. We need a real payment infrastructure here on the Fediverse.
2. We need to do it well, to avoid the (numerous) sins of the past.
3. I'm doing that right now, PLEASE HELP ME OMG.
I can't wait until the videos are up, then I can just link to that presentation a thousand times, because I laid out my entire life's purpose in it.
@mro @gregalotl @julian @reiver
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Evan Prodromou
in reply to Eugen Rochko • • •I can't speak for Julian, but I can talk about my impressions from @boris 's presentation.
He went through a dozen different apps running on the ATProto network that create custom data types and interactions and distribute them through the network. It's all happening on the client side, so these new apps aren't their own PDS servers; they can concentrate on cool client experience and leave the distribution up to the back end.
This is almost exactly parallel to the ActivityPub API. It was cool seeing recipes, check-ins, images, events all being created and managed by server less web clients.
It definitely reenergized me for focusing on the ActivityPub API.
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Essem
in reply to Eugen Rochko • • •i can't really speak for anyone here as a relative outsider, but as someone that has worked with both protocols i think one big reason is the lack of a public, accessible, synchronous space for discussion, development, and support
the unofficial discord linked in that slide tends to be fairly active - i've managed to receive answers to most of my atproto-related questions there, and as a result i've been able to get stuff done relatively quickly. whenever i've had issues with activitypub projects in the past, i've just sat on them for long periods of time because i wasn't sure where to ask about them (and i never really got much response from posts i made on the network about them either)
i see socialhub as a great place for asynchronous, more formal happenings, but there's not much for more casual happenings right now afaict (though i'd love to be proven wrong in this regard!)
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eblu
in reply to Essem • • •as someone who's also on the outside looking in, I kind of have to concur here. nobody's really having fun. even on socialhub, all I really see is just the same few people people getting really pedantic and argumentative over implementation details and whether rdf is good and where the bike shed for the nuclear reactor should be built. contrast atproto, where people can just be like "I built a toilet social network because it's funny."
I think that activitypub sorely needs more creativity and experimentation and people pushing the protocol in ways that are super unexpected, as well as having developers welcome new people on board and helping them get up to speed (and the casual discussion space that essem mentioned). doing this will probably bring a lot of much needed diversity and progress to the space imo
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julian
in reply to eblu • • •Re: Fedicon Livestream
eblu@wetdry.world said in Fedicon Livestream:
> even on socialhub, all I really see is just the same few people people getting really pedantic and argumentative over implementation details and whether rdf is good and where the bike shed for the nuclear reactor should be built. contrast atproto, where people can just be like "I built a toilet social network because it's funny."
I'd love to put some of my creative and cat-herding energies toward developing an implementor-first place for AP developer support. I often make the claim that AP-related discussion should take place over ActivityPub, so I'd love to put that into practice.
I'm not a chat-first person, so Discord isn't my first option, but there are other options...!
cc gargron@mastodon.social esm@wetdry.world
Fedicon Livestream
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Danyl Strype
in reply to julian • • •julian:
Come help us with the reboot of SocialHub, this is and has always been the vision. I'm 100% on board with making SH more fun! I am after all a member of fediverse.party, and the creator of the Freudian Typo of the Week : P. How about some new categories specifically for new implementers to compare notes, or for things like novelty implementations? We're totally open to ideas.
johannab:
It's hard to know what to make of this in the absence of definitions of each. From context, I'm guessing that for you Social Media = Datafarming corporate platforms, yes? How would you define Social Networks?
I tend to use both terms in their original usages (circa early 2000s). Where "social media" is open publishing with comments (blogging, vlogging, code forges with built-in bug tracking etc), so anyone can publish media and get rapid feedback. While "social network" covers any tool that enables regular interactions between people who know each other, 1:1 or in bounded groups (email, IM, group chat, web forums, link-sharing, etc).
By those definitions the current fediverse is a mixture of both. It's heavily weighted towards social media, but there's a lot of work being done to extend AP (in FRPs and SocialCG taskforces and elsewhere) so it can offer more social networking features.
To be clear, we don't disagree here, I'm just slicing the onion on a different angle
SocialHub developer community: Reboot or Shutdown?
SocialHubArnold Schrijver
in reply to Danyl Strype • • •strypey:
I recentely tooted my definitions. Maybe they are useful to others:
In any case social media are but a small subset of social networking against these definitions.
just small circles π
2025-07-31 14:31:37
Jon P
in reply to Arnold Schrijver • • •Interesting. I usually see social networking defined as a subset of social media. The definition of a social network site that's usually referenced is from danah boyd and Nicole Ellison's 2007 paper on Social Network Sites: Definition, History, and Scholarship:
By this definition, email, blogs without blogrolls, Signal (where I can't view or traverse others lists of connections) are all examples of social media, but not social networks.
boyd and ellison also talk about the rise of social network sites, including noting that several well-known examples started as non-networked social media:
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Arnold Schrijver
in reply to Jon P • • •jdp23:
I am using these definitions in the context of social experience design, which starts looking at social networking solutions at a personal perspective. Here a person's 'social experience' starts when they wake up in the morning and social activities start to stream into their senses. I.e. it starts in the real world, offline, where technology fulfills only a supportive role in connecting people and social interactions.
Welcome to Social coding commons
Social experience designJon P
in reply to Arnold Schrijver • • •Kichae
in reply to Jon P • • •Re: Fedicon Livestream
Jon P said in Fedicon Livestream:
> nteresting. I usually see social networking defined as a subset of social media.
Indeed. This is how it's often used in the social sciences that study online activity. Social Networking Sites are sites like Facebook, that require account following, or even bidirectional follows, while "social media" is everything from BBSes to forums to blogs with comment sections to, well, Social Networking Sites.
Jon P
2025-08-04 16:23:47
Jupiter Rowland
in reply to julian • • •@julian Quick, we need a new Forkey: Moosekey!
(Or does anyone have a better pun at hand?)
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Dmitri Zagidulin
in reply to julian • • •julian likes this.
Astro
in reply to julian • • •Jon P
in reply to Astro • • •julian likes this.