Oops something went wrong with my Bridgy syndication so thereās some missing bits to this convo. This issue is being closed because the issue is actually with webmention.io
See https://aaronparecki.com/2018/07/21/5/ for more info
Hmm odd! I see it as āactivity: rsvpā in the webmention.io mentions endpoint. Iām not sure how to link to that, though.
Webmentions are great! Iāve been using them since 2017 and itās changed the way I interact. I just wrote an article about how I got into Webmention and other IndieWeb technologies. Give it a read (https://eddiehinkle.com/2018/07/20/11/article/) and join us (https://indieweb.org/discuss)
Thatās a great idea. Iām doing something similar. Iām in the process of leaving Facebook, so I created three topics (Personal, Family, Tech) that people could sign up for. I have a monthly email that sends posts that are of the topics the person is interested in.
Youāve probably seen me ramble on about āIndieWebā the last few years. Hereās a great A List Apart article on webmentions, the core of how we can start interacting from our own website instead of silos.
Thatās great, thanks! I donāt see a problem with it being part of the same issue. If someone else working on Vouch does, theyāll leave a comment in the issue. As Vouch is relatively new in actual implementation, itās great to have as many eyes on it as possible
Let the rabbit hole take you in!! š Iām slightly kidding, but also serious. I embraced the rabbit hole a year and a half ago. Best thing I ever did tech-wise!
Those are some valid concerns. One thing Iād like to point out at the bottom of the spec is a link to Vouch, which is an anti-spam extension to Webmention that is in development (https://indieweb.org/Vouch)
This is a great description by Chris of the problems that webmentions aim to solve.
If you use Twitter, your friend Alice only uses Facebook, your friend Bob only uses his blog on WordPress, and your pal Chuck is over on Medium, itās impossible for any one of you to @mention another. Youāre all on different and competing platforms, none of which interoperate to send these mentions or notifications of them. The only way to communicate in this way is if you all join the same social media platforms, resulting in the average person being signed up to multiple services just to stay in touch with all their friends and acquaintances.
Given the issues of privacy and identity protection, different use cases, the burden of additional usernames and passwords, and the time involved, many people donāt want to do this. Possibly worst of all, your personal identity on the internet can end up fragmented like a Horcrux across multiple websites over which you have little, if any, control.
The web can be used to find common connections with folks you find interesting, and who donāt make you feel like so much of a weirdo. Itād be nice to be able to do this in a safe space that is not being surveilled.
Owning your own content, and publishing to a space you own can break through some of these barriers. Sharing your own weird scraps on your own site makes you easier to find by like-minded folks. If youāve got no tracking on your site (no Google Analytics etc), you are harder to profile. People canāt come to harass you on your own site if you do not offer them the means to do so
hmmm thatās really strange! Do you have the newest version of IndieAuth the plugin? Itās had to go through a lot of updates recently, but the newest version should work good.