Test for tooting.
dev
test
indieweb
toot
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-09-04 14:57:17.228522",
"url": "https://kongaloosh.com/e/2018/9/4/test-for-tooting",
"content": {
"text": "Test for tooting.\n \n \n \n \n \n \n dev\n \n test\n \n indieweb\n \n toot",
"html": "<p class=\"e-content\"></p><p>Test for tooting.</p>\n \n \n \n \n <i></i>\n \n <a href=\"https://kongaloosh.com/t/dev\">dev</a>\n \n <a href=\"https://kongaloosh.com/t/test\">test</a>\n \n <a href=\"https://kongaloosh.com/t/indieweb\">indieweb</a>\n \n <a href=\"https://kongaloosh.com/t/toot\">toot</a>"
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"name": "Alex Kearney",
"url": "http://kongaloosh.com",
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@jgmac1106 @tmcw @joeahand
Lots of other good examples and prior art at: https://indieweb.org/read
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"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-09-04T19:15:22+00:00",
"url": "http://stream.boffosocko.com/2018/jgmac1106-tmcw-joeahandlots-of-other-good-examples-and-prior-art",
"syndication": [
"https://twitter.com/ChrisAldrich/status/1037056572139220994"
],
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"https://twitter.com/jgmac1106/status/1037051400092565506"
],
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"text": "@jgmac1106 @tmcw @joeahand\n\nLots of other good examples and prior art at: https://indieweb.org/read",
"html": "<a href=\"https://twitter.com/jgmac1106\">@jgmac1106</a> <a href=\"https://twitter.com/tmcw\">@tmcw</a> <a href=\"https://twitter.com/joeahand\">@joeahand</a><br />\nLots of other good examples and prior art at: <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/read\">https://indieweb.org/read</a>"
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"type": "card",
"name": "Chris Aldrich",
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{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-09-04T07:03:49-07:00",
"url": "https://snarfed.org/2018-09-04_i-dont-hang-out-on-the-internet",
"name": "I don\u2019t hang out on the internet",
"content": {
"text": "I use Facebook. Not a ton, but I use it. I tweet, I Instagram, I read blogs. I do much of my work on GitHub. I\u2019m on mailing lists, IRC channels, StackOverflow. Not LinkedIn, but that\u2019s an exception. I say all this to show that I spend plenty of time on the Internet. More than my fair share.\nAnd yet. If I hang out with people on the Internet, I generally already know them in real life. This puts me a bit at odds with online communities like open source, the IndieWeb, and others. I participate in them a bit, but I sometimes find it hard to relate to their needs and interests. They\u2019re online communities, and I don\u2019t really\u2026commune\u2026online.\nThis is not remarkable. For most people, it\u2019s actually the norm, although that\u2019s changing quickly as the more and more of the world gets online. We\u2019re well past the halfway point! It\u2019s a bit unusual for nerds like me, though, since discovering the internet has long been a rite of passage for us.\n\n\nWell before the web and social networks, a goth kid didn\u2019t have to feel different or weird or alone. They could borrow their parent\u2019s computer, dial up a BBS, post a forum, and find goth compatriots. A gay kid deep in the Bible belt could sign up for AOL or Prodigy or CompuServe, join a chat room, and hear that they\u2019re not broken or sick. That it gets better. And a scrawny downtrodden geek with two left feet and coke bottle glasses could find a dog-eared copy of K&R C, follow the bread crumb trail to *nix newsgroups, stumble onto Linus\u2019s famous post introducing Linux, and discover her calling in life.\nThis is the great, techno-utopian vision of the hippie tech community of the \u201970s and \u201980s. Many of us in tech today are still following the echoes of foundational projects from this era: the Whole Earth catalog and the WELL (Stewart Brand et al), WIRED Magazine (Kevin Kelly et al), the Internet Archive (Brewster Kahle and John Perry Barlow), the Homebrew Computer Club, GNU (Richard Stallman), Xerox PARC and the Mother of All Demos (Douglas Engelbart et al). They set the stage for connecting the world across time, place, and boundaries of all kinds.\nThe next generation, the Gen-X-ers after hippie tech, grew up with computers. They got online as kids, or in junior high or high school. They ended up on early chat rooms and mailing lists. They learned HTML, wrote calculators in JavaScript, tested them in Netscape. They discovered sites like Metafilter and BoingBoing, found their way to (or created) LiveJournal and Blogger and MovableType, and made their own blogs. They pioneered the blogosphere and early social networks, federated them, and now criticize them at real world meetups like XOXOFest. They championed creativity, acceptance, and especially online communities, the natural extension of hippie tech.\nI love this. On the other hand, I was privileged and fortunate as a kid. I caught my share of bullying and social rejection, but it never got too bad. I always found like minded outcasts who wanted to read science fiction, take apart kitchen appliances, and poke around on computers. Not to mention video games, the great equalizer.\nWe did all the same things as other, more lonely geeks. We ran BBSes and played MUDs, we sent messages on AOL, we learned LogoWriter and BASIC and wrote buggy games and toys. The difference was, we were all friends in real life. We went to the same schools, or lived down the street. We didn\u2019t need to find people online to accept and support us. We\u2019d already found each other. We went online together, not alone.\nSo I never really looked online for social connection or community. Later, in college, people were more mature, open-minded, and actually interested in tech \u2013 at least in the Bay Area \u2013 so I had a full social life. That continued afterward with work, friends, and activities. I spent plenty of time online, but not to make new friends or find a community I was missing.\nThat\u2019s continued to this day. My news reader and social network feeds are dominated by people I know in real life. I\u2019ve met people online, in open source and elsewhere, but those relationships often remain functional. Hey, your thing has a bug! Argh, thanks. I disagree with something you wrote! Interesting, good point.\nThis is all fine. It probably wouldn\u2019t even strike me as interesting or worth writing about, except I\u2019ve spent a decent chunk of my free time in the IndieWeb, a direct offshoot of the Gen-X online natives. I found them because we share many of the same personal web site itches. Unlike me, though, they definitely hang out with people on the internet. When they ramp up on features like who to follow, web rings, or community management tools, I tend to glaze over.\nAgain, this is fine. There isn\u2019t really any problem here to be solved. I\u2019m just thinking out loud, as usual, trying to understand a bit of non-obvious friction in my life. Hopefully I\u2019ve crunched a bit more data and information into knowledge, if not quite wisdom. I don\u2019t hang out on the internet, exactly, but that\u2019s ok. I\u2019m definitely glad other people do.",
"html": "<p>\n <img src=\"https://aperture-proxy.p3k.io/ba5fa097747514d3123a876799eae62921760991/68747470733a2f2f736e61726665642e6f72672f772f77702d636f6e74656e742f706c7567696e732f6a65747061636b2f6d6f64756c65732f6c617a792d696d616765732f696d616765732f3178312e7472616e732e676966\" alt=\"1x1.trans.gif\" /></p><img src=\"https://aperture-proxy.p3k.io/227cb29c1be78b72a1f27907f372c3bf5ef40875/68747470733a2f2f736e61726665642e6f72672f6f70656e5f77696e646f772e6a7067\" alt=\"open_window.jpg\" />\n<p>I use Facebook. Not a ton, but I use it. I tweet, I Instagram, I read blogs. I do much of my work on GitHub. I\u2019m on mailing lists, IRC channels, StackOverflow. Not LinkedIn, but that\u2019s an exception. I say all this to show that I spend <em>plenty</em> of time on the Internet. More than my fair share.</p>\n<p>And yet. If I hang out with people on the Internet, I generally already know them in real life. This puts me a bit at odds with online communities like open source, the <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/\">IndieWeb</a>, and others. I participate in them a bit, but I sometimes find it hard to relate to their needs and interests. They\u2019re online communities, and I don\u2019t really\u2026commune\u2026online.</p>\n<p>This is not remarkable. For most people, it\u2019s actually the norm, although that\u2019s changing quickly as the more and more of the world gets online. <a href=\"https://medium.com/swlh/key-takeaways-from-mary-meekers-2018-internet-trends-report-16d5f1df606c\">We\u2019re well past the halfway point!</a> It\u2019s a bit unusual for nerds like me, though, since discovering the internet has long been a rite of passage for us.</p>\n<p>\n<span></span></p>\n<p>Well before the web and social networks, a goth kid didn\u2019t have to feel different or weird or alone. They could borrow their parent\u2019s computer, dial up a BBS, post a forum, and find goth compatriots. A gay kid deep in the Bible belt could sign up for AOL or Prodigy or CompuServe, join a chat room, and hear that they\u2019re not broken or sick. That <a href=\"https://itgetsbetter.org/\">it gets better</a>. And a scrawny downtrodden geek with two left feet and coke bottle glasses could find a dog-eared copy of <a href=\"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_C_Programming_Language\">K&R C</a>, follow the bread crumb trail to *nix newsgroups, stumble onto <a href=\"http://www.thelinuxdaily.com/2010/04/the-first-linux-announcement-from-linus-torvalds/\">Linus\u2019s famous post introducing Linux</a>, and discover her calling in life.</p>\n<p>This is the great, <a href=\"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technological_utopianism\">techno-utopian</a> vision of the hippie tech community of the \u201970s and \u201980s. Many of us in tech today are still following the echoes of foundational projects from this era: the <a href=\"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whole_Earth_Catalog\">Whole Earth catalog</a> and <a href=\"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_WELL\">the WELL</a> (Stewart Brand et al), <a href=\"https://wired.com/\">WIRED Magazine</a> (Kevin Kelly et al), the <a href=\"https://archive.org/\">Internet Archive</a> (Brewster Kahle and John Perry Barlow), the <a href=\"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homebrew_Computer_Club\">Homebrew Computer Club</a>, <a href=\"http://www.gnu.org/\">GNU</a> (Richard Stallman), Xerox PARC and the <a href=\"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Mother_of_All_Demos\">Mother of All Demos</a> (Douglas Engelbart et al). They set the stage for connecting the world across time, place, and boundaries of all kinds.</p>\n<p>The next generation, the Gen-X-ers after hippie tech, grew up with computers. They got online as kids, or in junior high or high school. They ended up on early chat rooms and mailing lists. They learned HTML, wrote calculators in JavaScript, tested them in Netscape. They discovered sites like Metafilter and BoingBoing, found their way to (or created) LiveJournal and Blogger and MovableType, and made their own blogs. They pioneered the blogosphere and early social networks, <a href=\"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fediverse\">federated them</a>, and now criticize them at real world meetups like <a href=\"https://xoxofest.com/\">XOXOFest</a>. They championed creativity, acceptance, and especially online communities, the natural extension of hippie tech.</p>\n<p>I love this. On the other hand, I was privileged and fortunate as a kid. I caught my share of bullying and social rejection, but it never got too bad. I always found like minded outcasts who wanted to read science fiction, take apart kitchen appliances, and poke around on computers. Not to mention video games, the great equalizer.</p>\n<p>We did all the same things as other, more lonely geeks. We ran BBSes and played MUDs, we sent messages on AOL, we learned LogoWriter and BASIC and wrote buggy games and toys. The difference was, we were all friends in real life. We went to the same schools, or lived down the street. We didn\u2019t need to find people online to accept and support us. We\u2019d already found each other. We went online <em>together</em>, not alone.</p>\n<p>So I never really looked online for social connection or community. Later, in college, people were more mature, open-minded, and actually interested in tech \u2013 at least in the Bay Area \u2013 so I had a full social life. That continued afterward with work, friends, and activities. I spent plenty of time online, but not to make new friends or find a community I was missing.</p>\n<p>That\u2019s continued to this day. My news reader and social network feeds are dominated by people I know in real life. I\u2019ve met people online, in open source and elsewhere, but those relationships often remain functional. Hey, <a href=\"https://snarfed.org/software\">your thing</a> has a bug! Argh, thanks. I disagree with <a href=\"https://snarfed.org/tag/essay\">something you wrote</a>! Interesting, good point.</p>\n<p>This is all fine. It probably wouldn\u2019t even strike me as interesting or worth writing about, except I\u2019ve spent a decent chunk of my free time in the <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/\">IndieWeb</a>, a direct offshoot of the Gen-X online natives. I found them because we share many of the same personal web site <a href=\"https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/scratch_one%27s_own_itch\">itches</a>. Unlike me, though, they definitely hang out with people on the internet. When they ramp up on features like <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/who_to_follow\">who to follow</a>, <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/webring\">web rings</a>, or community management tools, I tend to glaze over.</p>\n<p>Again, this is fine. There isn\u2019t really any problem here to be solved. I\u2019m just thinking out loud, <a href=\"https://snarfed.org/tag/essay\">as usual</a>, trying to understand a bit of non-obvious friction in my life. Hopefully I\u2019ve crunched a bit more <a href=\"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DIKW_pyramid\">data and information into knowledge</a>, if not quite wisdom. I don\u2019t hang out on the internet, exactly, but that\u2019s ok. I\u2019m definitely glad other people do.</p>"
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"type": "card",
"name": "Ryan Barrett",
"url": "https://snarfed.org/",
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Yeah, I don’t think it’s wrong, just interesting to note. Helps think through what UX areas need to be refined on the direct IndieWeb tools 🙂
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"published": "2018-09-04T00:44:03-04:00",
"summary": "Yeah, I don\u2019t think it\u2019s wrong, just interesting to note. Helps think through what UX areas need to be refined on the direct IndieWeb tools \ud83d\ude42",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/2018/09/04/14/reply/",
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"text": "Yeah, I don\u2019t think it\u2019s wrong, just interesting to note. Helps think through what UX areas need to be refined on the direct IndieWeb tools \ud83d\ude42",
"html": "<p>Yeah, I don\u2019t think it\u2019s wrong, just interesting to note. Helps think through what UX areas need to be refined on the direct IndieWeb tools \ud83d\ude42</p>"
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Its always interesting to see where replies to my posts originate from because I POSSE my replies to Twitter and Micro.blog and of course send IndieWeb replies via webmention. So when someone like you or @cleverdevil has the same POSSE’d post on all the services it’s funny to see where the replies come from (Indie Reply, Micro.blog or Twitter) 🤔 either because of push notifications or ease of replying you both tend to use Micro.blog
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"published": "2018-09-04T00:33:03-04:00",
"summary": "Its always interesting to see where replies to my posts originate from because I POSSE my replies to Twitter and Micro.blog and of course send IndieWeb replies via webmention. So when someone like you or @cleverdevil has the same POSSE\u2019d post on all the services it\u2019s funny to see where the replies come from (Indie Reply, Micro.blog or Twitter) \ud83e\udd14 either because of push notifications or ease of replying you both tend to use Micro.blog",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/2018/09/04/11/reply/",
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"text": "Its always interesting to see where replies to my posts originate from because I POSSE my replies to Twitter and Micro.blog and of course send IndieWeb replies via webmention. So when someone like you or @cleverdevil has the same POSSE\u2019d post on all the services it\u2019s funny to see where the replies come from (Indie Reply, Micro.blog or Twitter) \ud83e\udd14 either because of push notifications or ease of replying you both tend to use Micro.blog",
"html": "<p>Its always interesting to see where replies to my posts originate from because I POSSE my replies to Twitter and Micro.blog and of course send IndieWeb replies via webmention. So when someone like you or <a href=\"https://micro.blog/cleverdevil\">@cleverdevil</a> has the same POSSE\u2019d post on all the services it\u2019s funny to see where the replies come from (Indie Reply, Micro.blog or Twitter) \ud83e\udd14 either because of push notifications or ease of replying you both tend to use Micro.blog</p>"
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That’s definitely something I’d like to add to iOS… I don’t really know how often I would use them though. And Micropub/mf2 is still a little confusing around implementation on those to me, and I’ve never felt the compulsion to look in-depth at it.
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"summary": "That\u2019s definitely something I\u2019d like to add to iOS\u2026 I don\u2019t really know how often I would use them though. And Micropub/mf2 is still a little confusing around implementation on those to me, and I\u2019ve never felt the compulsion to look in-depth at it.",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/2018/09/04/7/reply/",
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"text": "That\u2019s definitely something I\u2019d like to add to iOS\u2026 I don\u2019t really know how often I would use them though. And Micropub/mf2 is still a little confusing around implementation on those to me, and I\u2019ve never felt the compulsion to look in-depth at it.",
"html": "<p>That\u2019s definitely something I\u2019d like to add to iOS\u2026 I don\u2019t really know how often I would use them though. And Micropub/mf2 is still a little confusing around implementation on those to me, and I\u2019ve never felt the compulsion to look in-depth at it.</p>"
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"type": "card",
"name": "Eddie Hinkle",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/",
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That’s a good suggestion. I’ll add that to my Micro.blog IndieAuth help page: “first log in to Micro.blog in Safari, then open Indigenous”. Thanks!
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"published": "2018-09-04T00:19:15-04:00",
"summary": "That\u2019s a good suggestion. I\u2019ll add that to my Micro.blog IndieAuth help page: \u201cfirst log in to Micro.blog in Safari, then open Indigenous\u201d. Thanks!",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/2018/09/04/5/reply/",
"in-reply-to": [
"https://micro.blog/manton/855732"
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"content": {
"text": "That\u2019s a good suggestion. I\u2019ll add that to my Micro.blog IndieAuth help page: \u201cfirst log in to Micro.blog in Safari, then open Indigenous\u201d. Thanks!",
"html": "<p>That\u2019s a good suggestion. I\u2019ll add that to my Micro.blog IndieAuth help page: \u201cfirst log in to Micro.blog in Safari, then open Indigenous\u201d. Thanks!</p>"
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"type": "card",
"name": "Eddie Hinkle",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/",
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Hmm yeah that’s tricky. Okay, so the email you get has two “buttons”: Sign in to Micro.blog and Open in Micro.blog for iOS. The top one should log you in via the web browser and the second should log you in the M.b iOS app. So you would want to select the top button to login via Safari. Then if you go back to Indigenous, cancel the login and enter your url again, it should allow you to approve Indigenous rather than enter your email. (cc/ @manton for visibility on potential IndieAuth workflow pitfalls)
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"published": "2018-09-04T00:06:26-04:00",
"summary": "Hmm yeah that\u2019s tricky. Okay, so the email you get has two \u201cbuttons\u201d: Sign in to Micro.blog and Open in Micro.blog for iOS. The top one should log you in via the web browser and the second should log you in the M.b iOS app. So you would want to select the top button to login via Safari. Then if you go back to Indigenous, cancel the login and enter your url again, it should allow you to approve Indigenous rather than enter your email. (cc/ @manton for visibility on potential IndieAuth workflow pitfalls)",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/2018/09/04/1/reply/",
"in-reply-to": [
"https://micro.blog/matpacker/855690"
],
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"text": "Hmm yeah that\u2019s tricky. Okay, so the email you get has two \u201cbuttons\u201d: Sign in to Micro.blog and Open in Micro.blog for iOS. The top one should log you in via the web browser and the second should log you in the M.b iOS app. So you would want to select the top button to login via Safari. Then if you go back to Indigenous, cancel the login and enter your url again, it should allow you to approve Indigenous rather than enter your email. (cc/ @manton for visibility on potential IndieAuth workflow pitfalls)",
"html": "<p>Hmm yeah that\u2019s tricky. Okay, so the email you get has two \u201cbuttons\u201d: Sign in to Micro.blog and Open in Micro.blog for iOS. The top one should log you in via the web browser and the second should log you in the M.b iOS app. So you would want to select the top button to login via Safari. Then if you go back to Indigenous, cancel the login and enter your url again, it should allow you to approve Indigenous rather than enter your email. (cc/ <a href=\"https://eddiehinkle.com/timeline/undefined\">@manton</a> for visibility on potential IndieAuth workflow pitfalls)</p>"
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"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Eddie Hinkle",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/",
"photo": "https://aperture-proxy.p3k.io/cc9591b69c2c835fa2c6e23745b224db4b4b431f/68747470733a2f2f656464696568696e6b6c652e636f6d2f696d616765732f70726f66696c652e6a7067"
},
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"refs": {
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You mention, I appear! 💨 am I a Genie? Haha! So Indigenous uses IndieAuth for its authentication. This page explains the different blog platforms that support IndieAuth. If you’re using a Micro.blog-hosted blog, then IndieAuth support is already built in. Just enter your blog’s url (not your profile url) on the login form (https://indigenous.abode.pub/ios/help/)
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"summary": "You mention, I appear! \ud83d\udca8 am I a Genie? Haha! So Indigenous uses IndieAuth for its authentication. This page explains the different blog platforms that support IndieAuth. If you\u2019re using a Micro.blog-hosted blog, then IndieAuth support is already built in. Just enter your blog\u2019s url (not your profile url) on the login form (https://indigenous.abode.pub/ios/help/)",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/2018/09/03/25/reply/",
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"content": {
"text": "You mention, I appear! \ud83d\udca8 am I a Genie? Haha! So Indigenous uses IndieAuth for its authentication. This page explains the different blog platforms that support IndieAuth. If you\u2019re using a Micro.blog-hosted blog, then IndieAuth support is already built in. Just enter your blog\u2019s url (not your profile url) on the login form (https://indigenous.abode.pub/ios/help/)",
"html": "<p>You mention, I appear! \ud83d\udca8 am I a Genie? Haha! So Indigenous uses IndieAuth for its authentication. <a href=\"https://indigenous.abode.pub/ios/help/\">This page</a> explains the different blog platforms that support IndieAuth. If you\u2019re using a Micro.blog-hosted blog, then IndieAuth support is already built in. Just enter your blog\u2019s url (not your profile url) on the login form (https://indigenous.abode.pub/ios/help/)</p>"
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This is a good post (from 2015) and is equally relevant to Mastodon as it is Twitter http://natdudley.com/blog/twitter-ux-and-bullying/ #indieweb
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"url": "https://aaronparecki.com/2018/09/03/23/",
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"text": "This is a good post (from 2015) and is equally relevant to Mastodon as it is Twitter http://natdudley.com/blog/twitter-ux-and-bullying/ #indieweb",
"html": "This is a good post (from 2015) and is equally relevant to Mastodon as it is Twitter <a href=\"http://natdudley.com/blog/twitter-ux-and-bullying/\"><span>http://</span>natdudley.com/blog/twitter-ux-and-bullying/</a> <a href=\"https://aaronparecki.com/tag/indieweb\">#<span class=\"p-category\">indieweb</span></a>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Aaron Parecki",
"url": "https://aaronparecki.com/",
"photo": "https://aperture-media.p3k.io/aaronparecki.com/2b8e1668dcd9cfa6a170b3724df740695f73a15c2a825962fd0a0967ec11ecdc.jpg"
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Austin folks interested in the IndieWeb, blogging, Micro.blog, or building your own web site… The next Homebrew Website Club meetup is this Wendesday, 6:30pm at Mozart’s Coffee. Hope to see you there!
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"html": "<p>Austin folks interested in the IndieWeb, blogging, Micro.blog, or building your own web site\u2026 The next Homebrew Website Club meetup is this Wendesday, 6:30pm at Mozart\u2019s Coffee. Hope to see you there!</p>",
"text": "Austin folks interested in the IndieWeb, blogging, Micro.blog, or building your own web site\u2026 The next Homebrew Website Club meetup is this Wendesday, 6:30pm at Mozart\u2019s Coffee. Hope to see you there!"
},
"published": "2018-09-03T13:53:28-05:00",
"post-type": "note",
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Testing a reply from admin vs micropub
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-09-03T17:46:47-04:00",
"url": "https://miklb.com/blog/2018/09/03/4323/",
"syndication": [
"https://mastodon.social/@miklb/100664030510620171",
"https://twitter.com/miklb/status/1036732278246920192"
],
"in-reply-to": [
"https://twitter.com/aaronpk/status/1036275156191068160"
],
"content": {
"text": "Testing a reply from admin vs micropub"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Michael Bishop",
"url": "https://miklb.com/",
"photo": "https://aperture-proxy.p3k.io/fa0674caee1c8265a0b0a240a0ec9c5d99ee50a2/68747470733a2f2f7365637572652e67726176617461722e636f6d2f6176617461722f63333961316436646637333532353934356366653530653939646164613733303f733d353026643d64656661756c7426723d72"
},
"post-type": "reply",
"refs": {
"https://twitter.com/aaronpk/status/1036275156191068160": {
"type": "entry",
"url": "https://twitter.com/aaronpk/status/1036275156191068160",
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The one thing missing from micropub clients is “quote tweets”. WP plus post-kinds plugin supports them, but not sure who else does.
{
"type": "entry",
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"url": "https://miklb.com/blog/2018/09/03/4318/",
"syndication": [
"https://mastodon.social/@miklb/100662550090816594",
"https://twitter.com/miklb/status/1036637535655682049"
],
"content": {
"text": "The one thing missing from micropub clients is \u201cquote tweets\u201d. WP plus post-kinds plugin supports them, but not sure who else does."
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Michael Bishop",
"url": "https://miklb.com/",
"photo": "https://aperture-proxy.p3k.io/fa0674caee1c8265a0b0a240a0ec9c5d99ee50a2/68747470733a2f2f7365637572652e67726176617461722e636f6d2f6176617461722f63333961316436646637333532353934356366653530653939646164613733303f733d353026643d64656661756c7426723d72"
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I’m telling you this stuff is often too important and worthy to be owned by an algorithm and lost in the stream.
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"url": "https://adactio.com/links/14303",
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"threads",
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"digital",
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"blogging",
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"text": "Your \u201cthread\u201d should have been a blog post\u2026\n\n\n\n\n I\u2019m telling you this stuff is often too important and worthy to be owned by an algorithm and lost in the stream.",
"html": "<h3>\n<a class=\"p-name u-bookmark-of\" href=\"http://www.patrickrhone.net/4480-2/\">\nYour \u201cthread\u201d should have been a blog post\u2026\n</a>\n</h3>\n\n<blockquote>\n <p>I\u2019m telling you this stuff is often too important and worthy to be owned by an algorithm and lost in the stream.</p>\n</blockquote>"
},
"post-type": "bookmark",
"_id": "917702",
"_source": "2",
"_is_read": true
}
{
"type": "event",
"name": "Homebrew Website Club Baltimore",
"published": "2018-09-01T07:37:23-04:00",
"start": "2018-09-05 18:30-0400",
"url": "https://martymcgui.re/2018/09/01/073723/",
"category": [
"event",
"HWC",
"IWC",
"IndieWeb",
"HWCBaltimore"
],
"location": [
"https://martymcgui.re/venues/digital-harbor-foundation-tech-center/"
],
"syndication": [
"https://www.facebook.com/events/2351463651535667/"
],
"post-type": "event",
"refs": {
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"type": "card",
"name": "Digital Harbor Foundation Tech Center",
"url": "https://martymcgui.re/venues/digital-harbor-foundation-tech-center/",
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}
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Still some bugs to work out in my micropub workflow
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"in-reply-to": [
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"text": "Still some bugs to work out in my micropub workflow"
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"type": "card",
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@mattl are you confusing #OSCON2010 & #FSWS2010 (which was literally the day before #OSCON)?
#FSWS2010 was the meeting that spurred us (@aaronpk @t) to create the #IndieWeb community. Neither of us went to OSCON that year.
cc: @aprilaser
More:
* https://indieweb.org/timeline
* 2010-07-18 https://indieweb.org/Federated_Social_Web_Summit#Portland_2010
* 2010-07-19…23 https://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon/oscon2010 (also in Portland, Oregon)
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"text": "@mattl are you confusing #OSCON2010 & #FSWS2010 (which was literally the day before #OSCON)?\n\n#FSWS2010 was the meeting that spurred us (@aaronpk @t) to create the #IndieWeb community. Neither of us went to OSCON that year. \ncc: @aprilaser\n\nMore: \n* https://indieweb.org/timeline\n* 2010-07-18 https://indieweb.org/Federated_Social_Web_Summit#Portland_2010\n* 2010-07-19\u202623 https://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon/oscon2010 (also in Portland, Oregon)",
"html": "<a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/mattl\">@mattl</a> are you confusing #<span class=\"p-category\">OSCON2010</span> & #<span class=\"p-category\">FSWS2010</span> (which was literally the day before #<span class=\"p-category\">OSCON</span>)?<br /><br />#<span class=\"p-category\">FSWS2010</span> was the meeting that spurred us (<a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/aaronpk\">@aaronpk</a> <a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/t\">@t</a>) to create the #<span class=\"p-category\">IndieWeb</span> community. Neither of us went to OSCON that year. <br />cc: <a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/aprilaser\">@aprilaser</a><br /><br />More: <br />* <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/timeline\">https://indieweb.org/timeline</a><br />* 2010-07-18 <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/Federated_Social_Web_Summit#Portland_2010\">https://indieweb.org/Federated_Social_Web_Summit#Portland_2010</a><br />* 2010-07-19\u202623 <a href=\"https://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon/oscon2010\">https://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon/oscon2010</a> (also in Portland, Oregon)"
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"author": {
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"name": "Tantek \u00c7elik",
"url": "http://tantek.com/",
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{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "Peter Molnar",
"url": "https://petermolnar.net",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://petermolnar.net/making-things-private/",
"published": "2017-10-28T15:00:00+00:00",
"content": {
"html": "<p><strong>Have you ever reached the point when you started questioning why you\u2019re doing something? </strong> <strong>I have, but never before with my website.</strong></p>\n<img src=\"https://aperture-proxy.p3k.io/dd33a8d20f1887b86e18873edb03841546d83318/68747470733a2f2f70657465726d6f6c6e61722e6e65742f6d616b696e672d7468696e67732d707269766174652f776861745f69735f6d795f707572706f73652e676966\" title=\"what_is_my_purpose\" alt=\"\" />\nWhat is my purpose? The unfortunate, sentient robot Rick created for the sole purpose of passing the butter.\n<p>The precursor to petermolnar.net started existing for a very simple reason: I wanted an online home and I wanted to put \u201cinteresting\u201d things on it. It was in 1999, before chronological ordering took over the internet.<a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn1\">1</a> Soon it got a blog-ish stream, then a portfolio for my photos, later tech howtos and long journal entries, but one thing was consistent for a very long time: the majority of the content was made by me.</p>\n<p>After encountering the indieweb movement<a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn2\">2</a> I started developing the idea of centralising one\u2019s self. I wrote about it not once<a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn3\">3</a> but twice<a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn4\">4</a>, but going through with importing bookmarks and favourites had an unexpected outcome: they heavily outweighed my original content.</p>\n<p><strong>Do you know what happens when your own website doesn\u2019t have your own content? It starts feeling distant and unfamiliar. When you get here, you either leave the whole thing behind or reboot it somehow. I couldn\u2019t imagine not having a website, so I rebooted.</strong></p>\n<p>I kept long journal entries; notes, for replies to other websites and for short entries; photos; and tech articles - the rest needs to continue it\u2019s life either archived privately or forgotten for good.</p>\n<h2>Outsourcing bookmarks</h2>\n<p>The indieweb wiki entry on <code>bookmark</code> says<a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn5\">5</a>:</p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>Why should you post bookmark posts? Good question. People seem to have reasons for doing so. (please feel free to replace this rhetorical question with actual reasoning)</p>\n</blockquote>\n<p>Since that didn\u2019t help, I stepped back one step further: why do I bookmark?</p>\n<p>Usually it\u2019s because I found them interesting and/or useful. What I ended up having was a date of bookmarking, a title, a URL, and some badly applied tags. In this form, bookmarks on my site were completely useless: I didn\u2019t have the content that made them interesting nor a way to search them properly.</p>\n<p>To solve the first problem, the missing content, my initial idea was to leave everything in place and pull an extract of the content to have something to search in. It didn\u2019t go well. There\u2019s a plethora of js;dr<a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn6\">6</a> sites these days, which don\u2019t, any more, offer a working, plain HTML output without executing JavaScript. For archival purposes, archive.org introduced an arcane file format, WARC<a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn7\">7</a>: it saves everything about the site, but there is no way to simply open it for view. Saving pages with crawlers including media files generated a silly amount of data on my system and soon became unsustainable.</p>\n<p>Soon I realised I\u2019m trying to solve a problem others worked on for years, if not decades, so I decided to look into existing bookmark managers. I tried two paid services, Pinboard<a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn8\">8</a> and Pocket<a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn9\">9</a> first. Pocket would be unbeatable, even though it\u2019s not self hosted, if the article extracts they make were available through their API. They are not. Unfortunately Pinboard wasn\u2019t giving me much over my existing crawler solutions.</p>\n<p><strong>The winner was Wallabag</strong><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn10\">10</a>: it\u2019s self-hosted, which is great, painful to install and set up, which is not, but it\u2019s completely self-sustaining, runs on SQLite and good enough for me.</p>\n<p>There was only one problem: none of these offered archival copies of images, and some of the bookmarks I made were solely for the photos on the sites. I found a format, called MHTML<a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn11\">11</a>, also known as <code>.eml</code>, which is perfect for single-file archives of HTML pages: it inlines all images as base64 encoded data.</p>\n<p>However, <strong>no browser offers a save-as-mhtml in headless mode, so to get your archives, you\u2019ll need to revisit your bookmarks. All of them.</strong> I enabled<a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn12\">12</a> save as MHTML in Chrome (Firefox doesn\u2019t know this format), installed the Wayback Machine<a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn13\">13</a> extension and saved GBs of websites. I also added them into Wallabag. It\u2019s an interesting, though very long journey, but you\u2019ll rediscover a lot of things for sure.</p>\n<p>When this was done, I dropped thousands of bookmark entries from my site.</p>\n<p><strong>If I do want to share a site, I\u2019ll write a note about it, but bookmarks, without context, belong to my archives.</strong></p>\n<h2>(Some) microblog imports should never have happened</h2>\n<p>I had iterations of imports, so after bookmarks it seemed reasonable to check what else may simply be noise on my site.</p>\n<p><em>Back in the days</em> people mostly wrote much lengthier entries: journal-like diary pages, thoughts, and it was, nearly always, anonymous. It all happened under pseudonyms.</p>\n<p>Parallel to this there were the oldschool instant messengers, like ICQ and MSN Messenger. In many cases, though you all had handles, or numbers, or usernames, you knew exactly who you were talking to. Most of these programs had a feature called status message - looking back at it they may have been precursors to microblogging, but there was a huge difference: they were ephemeral.</p>\n<p>With the rise of Twitter and Facebook status message also came (forced?) real identities, and tools letting us post from anywhere, within seconds. The content that earlier landed in status messages - <em>XY is listening to\u2026.</em>, <em>Feels like\u2026</em>, etc - suddenly became readable at any time, sometimes to anyone.</p>\n<p>I had content like this and I am, as well, guilty of posting short, meaningless, out-of-context entries. Imported burps of private life; useless shares of music pointing to long dead links; one-liner jokes, linking to bash.org; tiny replies and notes that should have been sent privately, either via email or some other mechanism.</p>\n<p><strong>Some things are meant to be ephemeral</strong>, no matter how loud the librarian is screaming deep inside me. <strong>Others belong in logs, and probably not on the public internet</strong>.</p>\n<p>I deleted most of them and placed a <code>HTTP 410 Gone</code> message for their URLs.</p>\n<h2>Reposts are messy</h2>\n<p>For a few months I\u2019ve been silently populating a category that I didn\u2019t promote openly: <code>favorite</code>s. At that page, I basically had a lot of <code>repost</code>s: images and galleries, with complete content, but with big fat URLs over them, linking to the original content.</p>\n<p>By using a silo you usually give permission to the silo to use your work and there. Due to the effects of <code>vote</code>s and <code>like</code>s (see later) you do, in fact, boost the visibility of the artist. <em>Note that usually these permissions are much broader, than you imagine: a lawyer reworded the policy of Instagram to let everyone understand, that by using the service, you allow them to do more or less anything the want to with your work<a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn14\">14</a></em>.</p>\n<p>But what is you take content out of a silo? <strong>The majority of images and works are not licensed in any special way, meaning you need to assume full copyright protection</strong>. Copyright prohibits publishing works without the author\u2019s explicit consensus, <strong>so when you repost</strong> something that doesn\u2019t indicate it\u2019s OK with it - Creative Commons, Public Domain, etc -, <strong>what you do is illegal</strong>.</p>\n<p>Also: for me, it feels like reposts, without notifying the creator, even though the licence allows it, are somewhat unfair - which is exactly what I was doing with these. Webmentions<a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn15\">15</a> would like to address this by having an option to send notifications and delete requests, but silos are not there yet to send or to receive any of these.</p>\n<p><strong>There is a very simple solution: avoid reposting anything without being sure it\u2019s licence allows you.</strong> Save it in a private, offline copy, if you really want to. Cweiske had a nice idea about adding source URLs into JPG XMP metadata <a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn16\">16</a>, so you know where it\u2019s from.</p>\n<h2>Silo reactions only make sense within the silo</h2>\n<p>When I started writing this entry, I differentiated 3, not-comment reaction types in silos:</p>\n<p>A <code>reaction</code> <strong>is a social interaction, essentially a templated comment</strong>. \u201cWell done\u201d, \u201cI disagree\u201d, \u201cbuu\u201d, \u201cacknowledged\u201d, \u2764, \ud83d\udc4d, \u2605, and so on. <em>I asked my wife what she thinks about likes, why she uses them, and I got an unexpected answer: because, unlike with regular, text comments, others will not be able react to it - so no trolling or abuse is possible.</em></p>\n<p>A <code>vote</code> <strong>has direct effect on ranking</strong>: think reddit up- and downvotes. Ideally it\u2019s anonymous: list of voters should not be displayed, not even for the owner of the entry.</p>\n<p>A <code>bookmark</code> <strong>is solely for one\u2019s self: save this entry because I value it and I want to be able to find it again</strong>. They should have no social implications or boosting effect at all.</p>\n<p>In many of the silos these are mixed - a Twitter fav used to range from an appreciation to a sarcastic meh<a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn17\">17</a>. With a range of reactions available this may get simpler to differentiate, but a <code>like</code> in Facebook still counts as both a <code>vote</code> and a <code>reaction</code>.</p>\n<p>I thought a lot about reactions and I came to the conclusion that I should not have them on my site. The first problem is they will be linking into a walled garden, without context, maybe pointing at a private(ish) post, available to a limited audience. <strong>If the content is that good, bookmark it as well. If it\u2019s a reaction for the sake of being social, it\u2019s ephemeral.</strong></p>\n<h2>Conclusions</h2>\n<p>Don\u2019t let your ideas take over the things you enjoy. Some ideas can be beneficial, others are passing experiments.</p>\n<p>There\u2019s a lot of data worth collecting: scrobbles, location data, etc., but these are logs, and most of them, in my opinion, should be private. If I\u2019m getting paranoid about how much services know about me, I shouldn\u2019t publish the same information publicly either.</p>\n<p>And finally: keep things simple. I\u2019m finding myself throwing out my filter coffee machine and replacing it with a pot that has a paper filter slot - it makes an even better coffee and I have to care about one less electrical thing. The same should apply for my web presence: the simpler is usually better.</p>\n\n\n<ol><li><p><a href=\"https://stackingthebricks.com/how-blogs-broke-the-web/\">https://stackingthebricks.com/how-blogs-broke-the-web/</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref1\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n<li><p><a href=\"https://indieweb.org/\">https://indieweb.org/</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref2\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n<li><p><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/indieweb-decentralize-web-centralizing-ourselves/\">https://petermolnar.net/indieweb-decentralize-web-centralizing-ourselves/</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref3\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n<li><p><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/personal-website-as-archiving-vault/\">https://petermolnar.net/personal-website-as-archiving-vault/</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref4\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n<li><p><a href=\"https://indieweb.org/bookmark\">https://indieweb.org/bookmark</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref5\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n<li><p><a href=\"http://tantek.com/2015/069/t1/js-dr-javascript-required-dead\">http://tantek.com/2015/069/t1/js-dr-javascript-required-dead</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref6\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n<li><p><a href=\"http://www.archiveteam.org/index.php?title=Wget_with_WARC_output\">http://www.archiveteam.org/index.php?title=Wget_with_WARC_output</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref7\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n<li><p><a href=\"http://pinboard.in/\">http://pinboard.in/</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref8\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n<li><p><a href=\"http://getpocket.com/\">http://getpocket.com/</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref9\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n<li><p><a href=\"https://wallabag.org/en\">https://wallabag.org/en</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref10\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n<li><p><a href=\"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MHTML\">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MHTML</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref11\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n<li><p><a href=\"https://superuser.com/a/445988\">https://superuser.com/a/445988</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref12\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n<li><p><a href=\"https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/waybackmachine/gofnhkhaadkoabedkchceagnjjicaihi\">https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/waybackmachine/gofnhkhaadkoabedkchceagnjjicaihi</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref13\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n<li><p><a href=\"https://qz.com/878790/a-lawyer-rewrote-instagrams-terms-of-service-for-kids-now-you-can-understand-all-of-the-private-data-you-and-your-teen-are-giving-up-to-social-media/\">https://qz.com/878790/a-lawyer-rewrote-instagrams-terms-of-service-for-kids-now-you-can-understand-all-of-the-private-data-you-and-your-teen-are-giving-up-to-social-media/</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref14\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n<li><p><a href=\"https://webmention.net/draft/#sending-webmentions-for-deleted-posts\">https://webmention.net/draft/#sending-webmentions-for-deleted-posts</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref15\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n<li><p><a href=\"http://cweiske.de/tagebuch/exif-url.htm\">http://cweiske.de/tagebuch/exif-url.htm</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref16\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n<li><p><a href=\"http://time.com/4336/a-simple-guide-to-twitter-favs/\">http://time.com/4336/a-simple-guide-to-twitter-favs/</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref17\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n</ol>",
"text": "Have you ever reached the point when you started questioning why you\u2019re doing something? I have, but never before with my website.\n\nWhat is my purpose? The unfortunate, sentient robot Rick created for the sole purpose of passing the butter.\nThe precursor to petermolnar.net started existing for a very simple reason: I wanted an online home and I wanted to put \u201cinteresting\u201d things on it. It was in 1999, before chronological ordering took over the internet.1 Soon it got a blog-ish stream, then a portfolio for my photos, later tech howtos and long journal entries, but one thing was consistent for a very long time: the majority of the content was made by me.\nAfter encountering the indieweb movement2 I started developing the idea of centralising one\u2019s self. I wrote about it not once3 but twice4, but going through with importing bookmarks and favourites had an unexpected outcome: they heavily outweighed my original content.\nDo you know what happens when your own website doesn\u2019t have your own content? It starts feeling distant and unfamiliar. When you get here, you either leave the whole thing behind or reboot it somehow. I couldn\u2019t imagine not having a website, so I rebooted.\nI kept long journal entries; notes, for replies to other websites and for short entries; photos; and tech articles - the rest needs to continue it\u2019s life either archived privately or forgotten for good.\nOutsourcing bookmarks\nThe indieweb wiki entry on bookmark says5:\n\nWhy should you post bookmark posts? Good question. People seem to have reasons for doing so. (please feel free to replace this rhetorical question with actual reasoning)\n\nSince that didn\u2019t help, I stepped back one step further: why do I bookmark?\nUsually it\u2019s because I found them interesting and/or useful. What I ended up having was a date of bookmarking, a title, a URL, and some badly applied tags. In this form, bookmarks on my site were completely useless: I didn\u2019t have the content that made them interesting nor a way to search them properly.\nTo solve the first problem, the missing content, my initial idea was to leave everything in place and pull an extract of the content to have something to search in. It didn\u2019t go well. There\u2019s a plethora of js;dr6 sites these days, which don\u2019t, any more, offer a working, plain HTML output without executing JavaScript. For archival purposes, archive.org introduced an arcane file format, WARC7: it saves everything about the site, but there is no way to simply open it for view. Saving pages with crawlers including media files generated a silly amount of data on my system and soon became unsustainable.\nSoon I realised I\u2019m trying to solve a problem others worked on for years, if not decades, so I decided to look into existing bookmark managers. I tried two paid services, Pinboard8 and Pocket9 first. Pocket would be unbeatable, even though it\u2019s not self hosted, if the article extracts they make were available through their API. They are not. Unfortunately Pinboard wasn\u2019t giving me much over my existing crawler solutions.\nThe winner was Wallabag10: it\u2019s self-hosted, which is great, painful to install and set up, which is not, but it\u2019s completely self-sustaining, runs on SQLite and good enough for me.\nThere was only one problem: none of these offered archival copies of images, and some of the bookmarks I made were solely for the photos on the sites. I found a format, called MHTML11, also known as .eml, which is perfect for single-file archives of HTML pages: it inlines all images as base64 encoded data.\nHowever, no browser offers a save-as-mhtml in headless mode, so to get your archives, you\u2019ll need to revisit your bookmarks. All of them. I enabled12 save as MHTML in Chrome (Firefox doesn\u2019t know this format), installed the Wayback Machine13 extension and saved GBs of websites. I also added them into Wallabag. It\u2019s an interesting, though very long journey, but you\u2019ll rediscover a lot of things for sure.\nWhen this was done, I dropped thousands of bookmark entries from my site.\nIf I do want to share a site, I\u2019ll write a note about it, but bookmarks, without context, belong to my archives.\n(Some) microblog imports should never have happened\nI had iterations of imports, so after bookmarks it seemed reasonable to check what else may simply be noise on my site.\nBack in the days people mostly wrote much lengthier entries: journal-like diary pages, thoughts, and it was, nearly always, anonymous. It all happened under pseudonyms.\nParallel to this there were the oldschool instant messengers, like ICQ and MSN Messenger. In many cases, though you all had handles, or numbers, or usernames, you knew exactly who you were talking to. Most of these programs had a feature called status message - looking back at it they may have been precursors to microblogging, but there was a huge difference: they were ephemeral.\nWith the rise of Twitter and Facebook status message also came (forced?) real identities, and tools letting us post from anywhere, within seconds. The content that earlier landed in status messages - XY is listening to\u2026., Feels like\u2026, etc - suddenly became readable at any time, sometimes to anyone.\nI had content like this and I am, as well, guilty of posting short, meaningless, out-of-context entries. Imported burps of private life; useless shares of music pointing to long dead links; one-liner jokes, linking to bash.org; tiny replies and notes that should have been sent privately, either via email or some other mechanism.\nSome things are meant to be ephemeral, no matter how loud the librarian is screaming deep inside me. Others belong in logs, and probably not on the public internet.\nI deleted most of them and placed a HTTP 410 Gone message for their URLs.\nReposts are messy\nFor a few months I\u2019ve been silently populating a category that I didn\u2019t promote openly: favorites. At that page, I basically had a lot of reposts: images and galleries, with complete content, but with big fat URLs over them, linking to the original content.\nBy using a silo you usually give permission to the silo to use your work and there. Due to the effects of votes and likes (see later) you do, in fact, boost the visibility of the artist. Note that usually these permissions are much broader, than you imagine: a lawyer reworded the policy of Instagram to let everyone understand, that by using the service, you allow them to do more or less anything the want to with your work14.\nBut what is you take content out of a silo? The majority of images and works are not licensed in any special way, meaning you need to assume full copyright protection. Copyright prohibits publishing works without the author\u2019s explicit consensus, so when you repost something that doesn\u2019t indicate it\u2019s OK with it - Creative Commons, Public Domain, etc -, what you do is illegal.\nAlso: for me, it feels like reposts, without notifying the creator, even though the licence allows it, are somewhat unfair - which is exactly what I was doing with these. Webmentions15 would like to address this by having an option to send notifications and delete requests, but silos are not there yet to send or to receive any of these.\nThere is a very simple solution: avoid reposting anything without being sure it\u2019s licence allows you. Save it in a private, offline copy, if you really want to. Cweiske had a nice idea about adding source URLs into JPG XMP metadata 16, so you know where it\u2019s from.\nSilo reactions only make sense within the silo\nWhen I started writing this entry, I differentiated 3, not-comment reaction types in silos:\nA reaction is a social interaction, essentially a templated comment. \u201cWell done\u201d, \u201cI disagree\u201d, \u201cbuu\u201d, \u201cacknowledged\u201d, \u2764, \ud83d\udc4d, \u2605, and so on. I asked my wife what she thinks about likes, why she uses them, and I got an unexpected answer: because, unlike with regular, text comments, others will not be able react to it - so no trolling or abuse is possible.\nA vote has direct effect on ranking: think reddit up- and downvotes. Ideally it\u2019s anonymous: list of voters should not be displayed, not even for the owner of the entry.\nA bookmark is solely for one\u2019s self: save this entry because I value it and I want to be able to find it again. They should have no social implications or boosting effect at all.\nIn many of the silos these are mixed - a Twitter fav used to range from an appreciation to a sarcastic meh17. With a range of reactions available this may get simpler to differentiate, but a like in Facebook still counts as both a vote and a reaction.\nI thought a lot about reactions and I came to the conclusion that I should not have them on my site. The first problem is they will be linking into a walled garden, without context, maybe pointing at a private(ish) post, available to a limited audience. If the content is that good, bookmark it as well. If it\u2019s a reaction for the sake of being social, it\u2019s ephemeral.\nConclusions\nDon\u2019t let your ideas take over the things you enjoy. Some ideas can be beneficial, others are passing experiments.\nThere\u2019s a lot of data worth collecting: scrobbles, location data, etc., but these are logs, and most of them, in my opinion, should be private. If I\u2019m getting paranoid about how much services know about me, I shouldn\u2019t publish the same information publicly either.\nAnd finally: keep things simple. I\u2019m finding myself throwing out my filter coffee machine and replacing it with a pot that has a paper filter slot - it makes an even better coffee and I have to care about one less electrical thing. The same should apply for my web presence: the simpler is usually better.\n\n\nhttps://stackingthebricks.com/how-blogs-broke-the-web/\u21a9\nhttps://indieweb.org/\u21a9\nhttps://petermolnar.net/indieweb-decentralize-web-centralizing-ourselves/\u21a9\nhttps://petermolnar.net/personal-website-as-archiving-vault/\u21a9\nhttps://indieweb.org/bookmark\u21a9\nhttp://tantek.com/2015/069/t1/js-dr-javascript-required-dead\u21a9\nhttp://www.archiveteam.org/index.php?title=Wget_with_WARC_output\u21a9\nhttp://pinboard.in/\u21a9\nhttp://getpocket.com/\u21a9\nhttps://wallabag.org/en\u21a9\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MHTML\u21a9\nhttps://superuser.com/a/445988\u21a9\nhttps://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/waybackmachine/gofnhkhaadkoabedkchceagnjjicaihi\u21a9\nhttps://qz.com/878790/a-lawyer-rewrote-instagrams-terms-of-service-for-kids-now-you-can-understand-all-of-the-private-data-you-and-your-teen-are-giving-up-to-social-media/\u21a9\nhttps://webmention.net/draft/#sending-webmentions-for-deleted-posts\u21a9\nhttp://cweiske.de/tagebuch/exif-url.htm\u21a9\nhttp://time.com/4336/a-simple-guide-to-twitter-favs/\u21a9"
},
"name": "Content, bloat, privacy, archives",
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"_id": "890320",
"_source": "268",
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Are you an #indieweb #WordPress user? We could use your help testing the latest version of micropub and Indieauth plugins. Drop by https://chat.indieweb.org/wordpress for details or ping me here. Thanks!
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-08-27T19:33:02-04:00",
"url": "https://miklb.com/blog/2018/08/27/4258/",
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"https://mastodon.social/@miklb/100624812184011697",
"https://twitter.com/miklb/status/1034222308175400961"
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"content": {
"text": "Are you an #indieweb #WordPress user? We could use your help testing the latest version of micropub and Indieauth plugins. Drop by https://chat.indieweb.org/wordpress for details or ping me here. Thanks!"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Michael Bishop",
"url": "https://miklb.com/",
"photo": "https://aperture-proxy.p3k.io/ea0271a66c081d9e09b200106fd14e4c49d9751c/68747470733a2f2f6d696b6c622e636f6d2f7061676573706565645f7374617469632f312e4a69426e4d71796c36532e676966"
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Ryan Barrett, who created the Micropub endpoint for WordPress, has turned the project over to the Indieweb repository as he has not been using it or actively working on it. I have been actively working on a major set of changes for it over the last two months. Ryan, despite not using it, has been generous with his time and feedback, despite the occasional WordPress or PHP frustration…and hopefully not too much from me. In his honor, I wrote this post on Indigenous for Android, published via the current release version of Micropub.
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-08-26T15:36:49-04:00",
"url": "https://david.shanske.com/2018/08/26/2054/",
"content": {
"text": "Ryan Barrett, who created the Micropub endpoint for WordPress, has turned the project over to the Indieweb repository as he has not been using it or actively working on it. I have been actively working on a major set of changes for it over the last two months. Ryan, despite not using it, has been generous with his time and feedback, despite the occasional WordPress or PHP frustration\u2026and hopefully not too much from me. In his honor, I wrote this post on Indigenous for Android, published via the current release version of Micropub."
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "David Shanske",
"url": "https://david.shanske.com/",
"photo": "https://david.shanske.com/wp-content/uploads/avatar-privacy/cache/gravatar/2/c/2cb1f8afd9c8d3b646b4071c5ed887c970d81d625eeed87e447706940e2c403d-125.png"
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"_id": "871328",
"_source": "5",
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}