😂 "For younger viewers, blogs and forums were where we talked on the web before everyone gave up and piled inside a load of walled gardens." https://youtu.be/jC4NNUYIIdM?t=3m4s Also this is a great explanation of the black dot bug and why unicode is hard. <⚫️> #indieweb
#indieweb #unicode

Marty any tips on traveling from Maryland to Portland in June? It’s still very questionable whether I’ll be able to make it out to IWS live, but I’m investigating travel just in case. Seems like most stuff I’m seeing is it takes like 3 days by train and it costs ~$400 round trip. Any secrets or is that about what you found?

Webmention

@xolotl @indiewebcamp And a nice attempt at a well marked up official RSVP on your site no less!
http://xolotl.org/rsvp-indieweb-summit-2018/
@mattmaldre I suspect it won't change much, since they're primarily used/displayed in comment sections. The bigger effect is going to be on products like Post Kinds Plugin, which may (hopefully) provide even easier modularization for injecting microformats into one's site.
@EddieHinkle @jackyalcine @wilkieii Almost as a joke on Facebook functionality a while back, I posted this voting related post: https://boffosocko.com/2016/11/08/i-voted/
There are some interesting suggestions and use cases here as well: http://microformats.org/wiki/vote-links

Episode 4: Webmentions and Privacy

Something like this is possible even without webmention specific support. Essentially it could be done using microformats2 similar to how Events and RSVPs work over webmention. https://indieweb.org/rsvp

I’m attending IndieWeb Summit 2018!

What a great piece! I think it’s an interesting challenge. The lack of “likes” and such do make the IndieWeb feel more lonely. And yet, when I DO receive real responses (thoughtful, text written responses), it provides a MUCH bigger social satisfaction then I received even from 50 likes.

As I started reading your post I thought “we need to do more to encourage likes on the IndieWeb”, by the end I thought “we need to do more to help people seamlessly reply to others” I think high quality engagement is the key to beating Facebook. Micro.blog has already provided me with much more substantive responses then I get from friends and family on Facebook.

Commenting

I have attempted to submit this Feedly feedback on their Uservoice forum. In the past I have had issues with the feedback not appearing, so I am making a copy here. The syndication link below is the URL they provided, but is not publicly visible currently.

When I send a WebSub notification (previously known as PubSubHubbub) for my Atom feed, the whitespace around links appears collapsed, so linked words run up against words around them. The feed is https://gregorlove.com/articles.atom. You can see this in Feedly with recent posts in my feed.

For this post, though (https://gregorlove.com/2017/05/ten-years-on/) I neglected to send a WebSub publish notification, so it appears Feedly did a regular poll of the feed and handled the whitespace correctly. It appears it's only for WebSub publish notifications that Feedly collapses the whitespace like this.

Webmention for ProcessWire Update

Privacy

I have been thinking about this issue a lot. GDPR seems to be everywhere, and I’m not sure that storing information on interactions is a privacy issue, but I want to respect people’s concerns. GDPR or not, I do not think this is a use case the law intended to prevent.

You use the WordPress suite of plugins. And being as I’m as regular contributor, there are a few ideas I’ve floating that I think are a good start, and invite you to contribute more.

  1. Add text to the Webmention form that explains how to use it to delete a mention. Since the form can be used without supporting webmentions on your own site, this is something that should be made clear.
  2. Add Setting to not display avatar/photo
  3. Add ability to edit mentions, to correct inaccurate data.
  4. Add setting to store more/less data.
  5. Add privacy policy to plugin for those who install it and add text/link to webmention form.
  6. Explain how to request a takedown of information.
  7. Periodically poll/refresh sources.
  8. Allow a different level of processing for ‘native’ webmentions vs backfeed run through a service like Bridgy.

This doesn’t solve all of the problems necessarily, but I think these ideas are a good faith effort in that direction.

 

Growing the IndieWeb

Homebrew Website Club Baltimore

#event #HWC #IWC #IndieWeb #HWCBaltimore

This Week in the IndieWeb Audio Edition • April 28th - May 4th, 2018

#podcast #IndieWeb #this-week-indieweb-podcast

right to be forgotten and non-repudiation