a list of fediverse accounts dicovered by StreetPass
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"html": "a list of fediverse accounts dicovered by StreetPass",
"text": "a list of fediverse accounts dicovered by StreetPass"
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"published": "2024-01-12T17:29:35+00:00",
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I just thought of an idea for my next vlog. I doubt it will be a topic I can cover in less than fifteen minutes. But after reading a thread about what it means to be in the #IndieWeb I felt like I can give my own perspective as someone who wrote their first web page back in 1995 and what I think the future of the web could (and maybe should) look like in the age of social media and the emerging #fediverse
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "@zalasur",
"url": "https://mastodon.surazal.net/@zalasur",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://mastodon.surazal.net/@zalasur/111744123839402265",
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"html": "<p>I just thought of an idea for my next vlog. I doubt it will be a topic I can cover in less than fifteen minutes. But after reading a thread about what it means to be in the <a href=\"https://mastodon.surazal.net/tags/IndieWeb\">#<span>IndieWeb</span></a> I felt like I can give my own perspective as someone who wrote their first web page back in 1995 and what I think the future of the web could (and maybe should) look like in the age of social media and the emerging <a href=\"https://mastodon.surazal.net/tags/fediverse\">#<span>fediverse</span></a></p>",
"text": "I just thought of an idea for my next vlog. I doubt it will be a topic I can cover in less than fifteen minutes. But after reading a thread about what it means to be in the #IndieWeb I felt like I can give my own perspective as someone who wrote their first web page back in 1995 and what I think the future of the web could (and maybe should) look like in the age of social media and the emerging #fediverse"
},
"published": "2024-01-12T17:20:14+00:00",
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"_id": "39973668",
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For a long time, my website was a simple page with contact information. It served me well but recently, I started itching for something more. I took some time during the past month to make it into something more personal. I'm seeing this as an opportunity to practice writing, introspection and just sharing what I'm up to, which doesn't always come very naturally to me.
https://pboivin.ca
#PersonalWebsite #SmallWeb #IndieWeb #Blogging #PHP
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "@pboivin",
"url": "https://phpc.social/@pboivin",
"photo": null
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"url": "https://phpc.social/@pboivin/111743813347173872",
"content": {
"html": "<p>For a long time, my website was a simple page with contact information. It served me well but recently, I started itching for something more. I took some time during the past month to make it into something more personal. I'm seeing this as an opportunity to practice writing, introspection and just sharing what I'm up to, which doesn't always come very naturally to me.</p><p><a href=\"https://pboivin.ca\"><span>https://</span><span>pboivin.ca</span><span></span></a></p><p><a href=\"https://phpc.social/tags/PersonalWebsite\">#<span>PersonalWebsite</span></a> <a href=\"https://phpc.social/tags/SmallWeb\">#<span>SmallWeb</span></a> <a href=\"https://phpc.social/tags/IndieWeb\">#<span>IndieWeb</span></a> <a href=\"https://phpc.social/tags/Blogging\">#<span>Blogging</span></a> <a href=\"https://phpc.social/tags/PHP\">#<span>PHP</span></a></p>",
"text": "For a long time, my website was a simple page with contact information. It served me well but recently, I started itching for something more. I took some time during the past month to make it into something more personal. I'm seeing this as an opportunity to practice writing, introspection and just sharing what I'm up to, which doesn't always come very naturally to me.https://pboivin.ca#PersonalWebsite #SmallWeb #IndieWeb #Blogging #PHP"
},
"published": "2024-01-12T16:01:16+00:00",
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{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2024-01-12T14:46:21+00:00",
"url": "https://werd.io/2024/running-your-own-site-is-painful-hosting-nazis-is-worse",
"name": "Running your own site is painful. Hosting Nazis is worse",
"content": {
"text": "I\u2019ve spent much of my career telling organizations that they should publish in a space that they control, on their own domain name.My usual argument is that it shields you from major changes in company policy, or even from the platform you\u2019re depending on from going out of business. If you\u2019ve built a media business on a platform knowing that it\u2019s been designed as a place for text-heavy media businesses, but one day it decides it\u2019s going to be more profitable if it becomes a place for 3D immersive video, and your whole audience is locked into that platform, your media business is in trouble.Publishing on your own site and your own domain name avoids that issue: you have full control over your underlying platform, and because you can change where your domain name points to, you can change your platform without losing any of your audience. In terms of Michael Porter\u2019s Five Forces, this tactic reduces the power of suppliers \u2014 the platform that underpins your site \u2014 to dictate the terms of your business.The trouble is, running your own site isn\u2019t easy. If you\u2019re a developer, you probably have the skills and knowledge to select an underlying platform, install it on a server, secure your infrastructure, customize it, and optimize it for discovery and sharing. If you\u2019re a writer, you might not \u2014 and even if you are a developer, if you\u2019re trying to start a site from scratch, all that technical administration is time taken away from working on all the stuff that makes your site special. Having a well-running platform for your site is table stakes; the core value of any site is the content itself. As any entrepreneur knows, you should spend as much time as possible on your core value: focusing on the thing that makes you unique and special will give you a better chance of success.All of this doesn\u2019t mean that the characteristics of a platform aren\u2019t important. They\u2019re very important, and can make or break a media startup, which is why Substack seemed like such a good choice for a great many people. It had everything: integrated payments, a solid recommendation engine that accelerated subscriber growth, support for using your own domain name, customized branding, optimizations for search engines and social sharing, and it just felt really good to use.On a technical level, Substack was clearly a very good choice for independent writers trying to make a living on their own. It also stood in contrast to Medium, which had similar goals but was firmly optimized around helping people earn a living from individual articles even if they didn\u2019t have a built-in audience (I\u2019ll say more about Medium in a minute). Both were free to get started on, relieving writers from the technical or financial burden of setting up their own platform, but each had a different focus. On Medium, great pieces stood alone, so you could gain an audience for a thought even if you didn\u2019t have a following; on Substack, you could build a following for your ongoing work.Which is why it was incredibly disappointing when it became clear that the platform actively embraced and funded bigots. First came the transphobes, which a few people made a fuss about, but not enough. (If we rewrote Martin Niem\u00f6ller\u2019s famous poem for today, trans people would be the first line.) Then, most recently, it became clear that Substack was rife with actual flag-waving Nazis.As Casey Newton pointed out in Platformer:To be clear, there are a lot more than six bad publications on Substack: our analysis found dozens of far-right publications advocating for the great replacement theory and other violent ideologies. [\u2026] The company\u2019s edgelord branding ensures that the fringes will continue to arrive and set up shop, and its infrastructure creates the possibility that those publications will grow quickly. That\u2019s what matters.That\u2019s what made it untenable for me and a great many other publishers. Platformer, Garbage Day, Citation Needed, and ParentData are some of the titles that have moved away (or announced that they\u2019re moving away) over the last week, and these are the high-profile tip of a much larger iceberg.So where should writers go?Unfortunately, I think a platform that\u2019s completely right as an alternative to Substack doesn\u2019t exist, which I\u2019ll talk about in a moment. Where writers have been going fall into a few buckets:\nButtondown, an independent newsletter platform\n\nGhost, a blogging platform with built-in support for newsletters and paid subscriptions (sometimes through Ryan Singel\u2019s excellent Outpost service)\n\nWordPress, the blogging platform that powers roughly a third of the web (but has poor support for newsletters and paid subscriptions)\nBiting the bullet and developing or self-hosting their own thing\nMy approach, because I\u2019ve always had my own site running on Known, has been to move my newsletter to Buttondown. It\u2019s worked really well for me, but these are all good approaches.I\u2019ve been a bit surprised to not hear about people moving to\u00a0Medium, which has been undergoing a quiet transformation under Tony Stubblebine\u2019s leadership over the last year. It\u2019s certainly worth considering: revenue is up, the platform has reorganized itself around publishers and followings, it supports custom domains, writers can take their content and subscribers with them if they choose to leave, and the strategic thrash of the mid-2010s is gone. Tony and his team are genuinely hunkering down and doing the work to support writers.A big difference with Medium is that the audience\u2019s financial relationship is with the platform rather than a writer. On Substack, you subscribed to outlets like Platformer and Citation Needed individually; on Medium, you\u2019re paying one of two tiers to access the full network. For readers, that\u2019s clearly far better: you\u2019re getting a world of writing for the same flat price. For writers, getting frictionless access to Medium\u2019s aggregate paying userbase may help grow followers; it is clearly true, though, that you can\u2019t bring your paid customer relationships with you if you choose to leave. On Substack, those relationships are made directly with you and depend on you having your own account with Stripe, which means you can leave and keep servicing your subscriptions without asking anyone to re-enter their payment details.In order to really support independent media startups, particularly individual writers looking to make money from their work on their own, there are three categories of service that I wish existed:A fully-managed direct relationship platform for writersAny writer should be able to sign up to a service, configure their platform, and begin selling their writing directly to an audience without worrying about their writing showing up next to, or appearing to endorse, hate speech. It should be beautiful, easy to use, and friction-free.They should be able to own their relationship with their audience to the point where if they choose to change platforms, they can take their audience with them and seamlessly start writing somewhere else. They should never have to deal with technical configuration: everything should just work. And each writer should be able to gain from network effects as the platform grows, allowing them to gain a following and build revenue more quickly.That\u2019s almost Medium, aside from the direct relationships. That\u2019s almost Ghost, aside from the network effects. So close!Indie recommendationsA lot of the focus of the indieweb and of the fediverse has been to provide an independent alternative to social media. I have no criticism of that approach! We need that! But there\u2019s also something I\u2019d like to see that goes beyond it.I think we\u2019ve assumed that social media is how we learn about new websites and articles. That\u2019s a user experience pattern that has been inherited directly from Twitter and Facebook, which always wanted to be the way people discovered news and information. When I built the first version of Known, I had the idea of owning your own versions of social media platforms in mind.Long before social networks, personal websites had links to other sites the authors enjoyed. Sometimes it was just called a links page. Blogs called them the blogroll. Substack\u2019s version of this was for an author to recommend other newsletters, so when someone subscribed, they would also be asked if they\u2019d want to subscribe to these other author-endorsed outlets. It was a superb way for writers to rapidly build a following outside of their own established networks.The following requires some underlying protocol work, but here\u2019s how it would work from the user side:As a user, I want to subscribe to an author.\nI visit their site and click to subscribe, entering my details.\nThe site shows me a selection of other blogs or newsletters the author recommends.\nI agree to subscribe to those. (Not as a paying subscriber, but as someone who will receive new content as it is published.)\nI am instantly fully subscribed, without having to enter any further information on those third party sites.\nThe authors of those sites know that they gained new subscribers that were referred from the recommending site.\nThe net result: every author can have the freedom and ownership of publishing on their own site, but with the network effects of a closed network.Of course, even without this infrastructure, any site can already create a links page or a blogroll. I\u2019m actively working on that.Self-hosting that works like an iPhoneYou should be able to pay for server hosting and have access to a fully-managed App Store that, just like an iPhone, lets you install new services with one click and keeps your software up-to-date. Some of those services will be free; some will be paid-for. It should be no more complicated than that, with zero exposure to the underlying server processes and scripts.Shared hosting still hasn\u2019t really evolved since the nineties: it\u2019s a world of (S)FTP access, dubious control panels that don\u2019t do much to help the user, and appalling user experiences. Virtual hosting is newer and more powerful, but you need to be a very sophisticated user to deal with containers, package managers, and so on. The former are designed for hobbyists; the latter are designed for software engineering teams. A self-hosting environment that\u2019s optimized for non-technical individuals to own their own websites and data does not exist.In summaryWe do need a way to support great writing. It\u2019s how we learn about the world, quite often in a way that helps inform our democratic decisions and the way we see the society around us. A world where everyone is writing for free and independent journalism has no means of financial support is not tenable or desirable, in my opinion.I also believe that not providing financial support to literal Nazis is non-negotiable. I can\u2019t believe that\u2019s an argument we even have to make. This isn\u2019t ambiguous: Nazis are bad.The indie web should be a place where independent writers can thrive. I believe it will be. We just need a little bit more infrastructure: network effects, easy payments, removing the need for non-technical people to get involved in technical administration. The Ghost ecosystem in particular has shown us that there\u2019s a great opportunity for this to be done well for writers.Unlike many open source / indie web folks, I also don\u2019t draw a hard line about hosted services like Medium, given the right features. The important thing for me is that writers can write and be heard. Anything that makes that easier \u2014 while not, again, literally funding Nazis \u2014 is fantastic in my book. The writing is what matters. Letting people connect and learn from each other \u2014 reaching people with ideas \u2014 is what the web is all about. The trick is giving them the tools and freedom to do that sustainably, on their own terms.",
"html": "<p><img src=\"https://werd.io/file/65a1509752b7c0d9b9041632/thumb.jpg\" alt=\"A stock photograph of someone writing on a laptop\" width=\"1024\" height=\"683\" /></p><p>I\u2019ve spent much of my career telling organizations that they should publish in a space that they control, on their own domain name.</p><p>My usual argument is that it shields you from major changes in company policy, or even from the platform you\u2019re depending on from going out of business. If you\u2019ve built a media business on a platform knowing that it\u2019s been designed as a place for text-heavy media businesses, but one day it decides it\u2019s going to be more profitable if it becomes a place for 3D immersive video, and your whole audience is locked into that platform, your media business is in trouble.</p><p>Publishing on your own site and your own domain name avoids that issue: you have full control over your underlying platform, and because you can change where your domain name points to, you can change your platform without losing any of your audience. In terms of <a href=\"https://www.isc.hbs.edu/strategy/business-strategy/Pages/the-five-forces.aspx\">Michael Porter\u2019s Five Forces</a>, this tactic reduces the power of suppliers \u2014 the platform that underpins your site \u2014 to dictate the terms of your business.</p><p>The trouble is, running your own site isn\u2019t easy. If you\u2019re a developer, you probably have the skills and knowledge to select an underlying platform, install it on a server, secure your infrastructure, customize it, and optimize it for discovery and sharing. If you\u2019re a writer, you might not \u2014 and even if you <em>are</em> a developer, if you\u2019re trying to start a site from scratch, all that technical administration is time taken away from working on all the stuff that makes your site special. Having a well-running platform for your site is table stakes; the core value of any site is the content itself. As any entrepreneur knows, you should spend as much time as possible on your core value: focusing on the thing that makes you unique and special will give you a better chance of success.</p><p>All of this doesn\u2019t mean that the characteristics of a platform aren\u2019t important. They\u2019re <em>very</em> important, and can make or break a media startup, which is why Substack seemed like such a good choice for a great many people. It had everything: integrated payments, a solid recommendation engine that accelerated subscriber growth, support for using your own domain name, customized branding, optimizations for search engines and social sharing, and it just felt really good to use.</p><p>On a technical level, Substack was clearly a very good choice for independent writers trying to make a living on their own. It also stood in contrast to Medium, which had similar goals but was firmly optimized around helping people earn a living from individual articles even if they didn\u2019t have a built-in audience (I\u2019ll say more about Medium in a minute). Both were free to get started on, relieving writers from the technical or financial burden of setting up their own platform, but each had a different focus. On Medium, great pieces stood alone, so you could gain an audience for a thought even if you didn\u2019t have a following; on Substack, you could build a following for your ongoing work.</p><p>Which is why it was incredibly disappointing when it became clear that the platform actively embraced and funded bigots. First came the transphobes, which a few people made a fuss about, but not enough. (If we rewrote <a href=\"https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/martin-niemoeller-first-they-came-for-the-socialists\">Martin Niem\u00f6ller\u2019s famous poem</a> for today, trans people would be the first line.) Then, most recently, it became clear that Substack was rife with actual flag-waving Nazis.</p><p><a href=\"https://www.platformer.news/p/why-platformer-is-leaving-substack\">As Casey Newton pointed out in Platformer</a>:</p><blockquote><p>To be clear, there are a lot more than six bad publications on Substack: our analysis found dozens of far-right publications advocating for the great replacement theory and other violent ideologies. [\u2026] The company\u2019s edgelord branding ensures that the fringes will continue to arrive and set up shop, and its infrastructure creates the possibility that those publications will grow quickly. That\u2019s what matters.</p></blockquote><p>That\u2019s what made it untenable for me and a great many other publishers. Platformer, Garbage Day, Citation Needed, and ParentData are some of the titles that have moved away (or announced that they\u2019re moving away) over the last week, and these are the high-profile tip of a much larger iceberg.</p><p>So where should writers go?</p><p>Unfortunately, I think a platform that\u2019s completely right as an alternative to Substack doesn\u2019t exist, which I\u2019ll talk about in a moment. Where writers <em>have</em> been going fall into a few buckets:</p><ul><li>\n<a href=\"https://buttondown.email\">Buttondown</a>, an independent newsletter platform</li>\n<li>\n<a href=\"https://ghost.org\">Ghost</a>, a blogging platform with built-in support for newsletters and paid subscriptions (sometimes through Ryan Singel\u2019s excellent <a href=\"https://outpost.pub/\">Outpost</a> service)</li>\n<li>\n<a href=\"https://wordpress.org\">WordPress</a>, the blogging platform that powers roughly a third of the web (but has poor support for newsletters and paid subscriptions)</li>\n<li>Biting the bullet and developing or self-hosting their own thing</li>\n</ul><p>My approach, because I\u2019ve always had my own site running on <a href=\"https://withknown.com\">Known</a>, has been to move my newsletter to Buttondown. It\u2019s worked really well for me, but these are all good approaches.</p><p>I\u2019ve been a bit surprised to not hear about people moving to\u00a0<a href=\"https://medium.com\">Medium</a>, which has been undergoing a quiet transformation under Tony Stubblebine\u2019s leadership over the last year. It\u2019s certainly worth considering: revenue is up, the platform has reorganized itself around publishers and followings, it supports custom domains, writers <em>can</em> take their content and subscribers with them if they choose to leave, and the strategic thrash of the mid-2010s is gone. Tony and his team are genuinely hunkering down and doing the work to support writers.</p><p>A big difference with Medium is that the audience\u2019s financial relationship is with the platform rather than a writer. On Substack, you subscribed to outlets like Platformer and Citation Needed individually; on Medium, <a href=\"https://medium.com/membership\">you\u2019re paying one of two tiers to access the full network</a>. For readers, that\u2019s clearly far better: you\u2019re getting a world of writing for the same flat price. For writers, getting frictionless access to Medium\u2019s aggregate paying userbase may help grow followers; it is clearly true, though, that you can\u2019t bring your paid customer relationships with you if you choose to leave. On Substack, those relationships are made directly with you and depend on you having your own account with <a href=\"https://stripe.com/\">Stripe</a>, which means you can leave and keep servicing your subscriptions without asking anyone to re-enter their payment details.</p><p>In order to really support independent media startups, particularly individual writers looking to make money from their work on their own, there are three categories of service that I wish existed:</p><h3>A fully-managed direct relationship platform for writers</h3><p>Any writer should be able to sign up to a service, configure their platform, and begin selling their writing directly to an audience without worrying about their writing showing up next to, or appearing to endorse, hate speech. It should be beautiful, easy to use, and friction-free.</p><p>They should be able to own their relationship with their audience to the point where if they choose to change platforms, they can take their audience with them and seamlessly start writing somewhere else. They should never have to deal with technical configuration: everything should just work. And each writer should be able to gain from network effects as the platform grows, allowing them to gain a following and build revenue more quickly.</p><p>That\u2019s almost Medium, aside from the direct relationships. That\u2019s almost Ghost, aside from the network effects. So close!</p><h3>Indie recommendations</h3><p>A lot of the focus of the <a href=\"https://indieweb.org\">indieweb</a> and of the <a href=\"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fediverse\">fediverse</a> has been to provide an independent alternative to social media. I have no criticism of that approach! We need that! But there\u2019s also something I\u2019d like to see that goes beyond it.</p><p>I think we\u2019ve assumed that social media is how we learn about new websites and articles. That\u2019s a user experience pattern that has been inherited directly from Twitter and Facebook, which always wanted to be the way people discovered news and information. When I built the first version of Known, I had the idea of owning your own versions of social media platforms in mind.</p><p>Long before social networks, personal websites had links to other sites the authors enjoyed. Sometimes it was just called a links page. Blogs called them the <em>blogroll</em>. Substack\u2019s version of this was for an author to recommend other newsletters, so when someone subscribed, they would also be asked if they\u2019d want to subscribe to these other author-endorsed outlets. It was a superb way for writers to rapidly build a following outside of their own established networks.</p><p>The following requires some underlying protocol work, but here\u2019s how it would work from the user side:</p><ul><li>As a user, I want to subscribe to an author.</li>\n<li>I visit their site and click to subscribe, entering my details.</li>\n<li>The site shows me a selection of other blogs or newsletters the author recommends.</li>\n<li>I agree to subscribe to those. (Not as a <em>paying</em> subscriber, but as someone who will receive new content as it is published.)</li>\n<li>I am instantly fully subscribed, without having to enter any further information on those third party sites.</li>\n<li>The authors of those sites know that they gained new subscribers that were referred from the recommending site.</li>\n</ul><p>The net result: every author can have the freedom and ownership of publishing on their own site, but with the network effects of a closed network.</p><p>Of course, even without this infrastructure, any site can already create a links page or a blogroll. I\u2019m actively working on that.</p><h3>Self-hosting that works like an iPhone</h3><p>You should be able to pay for server hosting and have access to a fully-managed App Store that, just like an iPhone, lets you install new services with one click and keeps your software up-to-date. Some of those services will be free; some will be paid-for. It should be no more complicated than that, with zero exposure to the underlying server processes and scripts.</p><p>Shared hosting <em>still</em> hasn\u2019t really evolved since the nineties: it\u2019s a world of (S)FTP access, dubious control panels that don\u2019t do much to help the user, and appalling user experiences. <em>Virtual</em> hosting is newer and more powerful, but you need to be a very sophisticated user to deal with containers, package managers, and so on. The former are designed for hobbyists; the latter are designed for software engineering teams. A self-hosting environment that\u2019s optimized for non-technical individuals to own their own websites and data does not exist.</p><h3>In summary</h3><p>We do need a way to support great writing. It\u2019s how we learn about the world, quite often in a way that helps inform our democratic decisions and the way we see the society around us. A world where everyone is writing for free and independent journalism has no means of financial support is not tenable or desirable, in my opinion.</p><p>I also believe that not providing financial support to literal Nazis is non-negotiable. I can\u2019t believe that\u2019s an argument we even have to make. This isn\u2019t ambiguous: Nazis are bad.</p><p>The indie web should be a place where independent writers can thrive. I believe it will be. We just need a little bit more infrastructure: network effects, easy payments, removing the need for non-technical people to get involved in technical administration. The Ghost ecosystem in particular has shown us that there\u2019s a great opportunity for this to be done well for writers.</p><p>Unlike many open source / indie web folks, I also don\u2019t draw a hard line about hosted services like Medium, given the right features. The important thing for me is that writers can write and be heard. Anything that makes that easier \u2014 while not, again, <em>literally funding Nazis</em> \u2014 is fantastic in my book. The writing is what matters. Letting people connect and learn from each other \u2014 reaching people with ideas \u2014 is what the web is all about. The trick is giving them the tools and freedom to do that sustainably, on their own terms.</p>"
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"name": "Ben Werdmuller",
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Yet another stellar release by Rauthy OIDC:
https://github.com/sebadob/rauthy/releases/tag/v0.20.0
Encrypted backups automation · bot & spam protection with spow · separate users cache.
I'm building a new kind of #IndieWeb app on top of the Rauthy identity layer together with a former colleague from Discourse: https://writing.exchange/@erlend/110015148048407614
#rust #opensource
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"url": "https://writing.exchange/@erlend",
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"html": "<p>Yet another stellar release by Rauthy OIDC:</p><p><a href=\"https://github.com/sebadob/rauthy/releases/tag/v0.20.0\"><span>https://</span><span>github.com/sebadob/rauthy/rele</span><span>ases/tag/v0.20.0</span></a></p><p>Encrypted backups automation \u00b7 bot & spam protection with spow \u00b7 separate users cache.</p><p>I'm building a new kind of <a href=\"https://writing.exchange/tags/IndieWeb\">#<span>IndieWeb</span></a> app on top of the Rauthy identity layer together with a former colleague from Discourse: <a href=\"https://writing.exchange/@erlend/110015148048407614\"><span>https://</span><span>writing.exchange/@erlend/11001</span><span>5148048407614</span></a></p><p><a href=\"https://writing.exchange/tags/rust\">#<span>rust</span></a> <a href=\"https://writing.exchange/tags/opensource\">#<span>opensource</span></a></p>",
"text": "Yet another stellar release by Rauthy OIDC:https://github.com/sebadob/rauthy/releases/tag/v0.20.0Encrypted backups automation \u00b7 bot & spam protection with spow \u00b7 separate users cache.I'm building a new kind of #IndieWeb app on top of the Rauthy identity layer together with a former colleague from Discourse: https://writing.exchange/@erlend/110015148048407614#rust #opensource"
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"published": "2024-01-12T12:59:34+00:00",
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}
New blog about the Indie Web, from an absolute idiot's perspective and the horrors of the commercial internet.
http://matthewsmyth.co.uk/blog/but-seriously-an-idiots-guide-to-the-indie-web/
#Blog #SelfHosting #IndieWeb
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "@mxtthxw",
"url": "https://mxtthxw.art/@mxtthxw",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://mxtthxw.art/@mxtthxw/111742724018552960",
"content": {
"html": "<p>New blog about the Indie Web, from an absolute idiot's perspective and the horrors of the commercial internet.</p><p><a href=\"http://matthewsmyth.co.uk/blog/but-seriously-an-idiots-guide-to-the-indie-web/\"><span>http://</span><span>matthewsmyth.co.uk/blog/but-se</span><span>riously-an-idiots-guide-to-the-indie-web/</span></a></p><p><a href=\"https://mxtthxw.art/tags/Blog\">#<span>Blog</span></a> <a href=\"https://mxtthxw.art/tags/SelfHosting\">#<span>SelfHosting</span></a> <a href=\"https://mxtthxw.art/tags/IndieWeb\">#<span>IndieWeb</span></a></p>",
"text": "New blog about the Indie Web, from an absolute idiot's perspective and the horrors of the commercial internet.http://matthewsmyth.co.uk/blog/but-seriously-an-idiots-guide-to-the-indie-web/#Blog #SelfHosting #IndieWeb"
},
"published": "2024-01-12T11:24:15+00:00",
"post-type": "note",
"_id": "39970547",
"_source": "7235",
"_is_read": false
}
The Internet Is About to Get Weird Again
The internet seems ripe for change, and millions of people seem poised to connect in new ways, as they reconsider their relationship to technology.
https://www.rollingstone.com/culture/culture-commentary/internet-future-about-to-get-weird-1234938403/
#anildash #beautifulweb #indieweb
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "@brunoamaral",
"url": "https://mastodon.social/@brunoamaral",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://mastodon.social/@brunoamaral/111742196129683210",
"content": {
"html": "<p>The Internet Is About to Get Weird Again<br />The internet seems ripe for change, and millions of people seem poised to connect in new ways, as they reconsider their relationship to technology.<br /><a href=\"https://www.rollingstone.com/culture/culture-commentary/internet-future-about-to-get-weird-1234938403/\"><span>https://www.</span><span>rollingstone.com/culture/cultu</span><span>re-commentary/internet-future-about-to-get-weird-1234938403/</span></a><br /><a href=\"https://mastodon.social/tags/anildash\">#<span>anildash</span></a> <a href=\"https://mastodon.social/tags/beautifulweb\">#<span>beautifulweb</span></a> <a href=\"https://mastodon.social/tags/indieweb\">#<span>indieweb</span></a></p>",
"text": "The Internet Is About to Get Weird Again\nThe internet seems ripe for change, and millions of people seem poised to connect in new ways, as they reconsider their relationship to technology.\nhttps://www.rollingstone.com/culture/culture-commentary/internet-future-about-to-get-weird-1234938403/\n#anildash #beautifulweb #indieweb"
},
"published": "2024-01-12T09:10:00+00:00",
"post-type": "note",
"_id": "39969736",
"_source": "7235",
"_is_read": false
}
@shawnhooper @caseynewton Web is for publishing (and commenting), authoring (and backup) should be done only on your system.
#indieWeb #StaticGenerators
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "@mcepl",
"url": "https://floss.social/@mcepl",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://floss.social/@mcepl/111742065876952234",
"content": {
"html": "<p><span class=\"h-card\"><a class=\"u-url\" href=\"https://fosstodon.org/@shawnhooper\">@<span>shawnhooper</span></a></span> <span class=\"h-card\"><a class=\"u-url\" href=\"https://mastodon.social/@caseynewton\">@<span>caseynewton</span></a></span> Web is for publishing (and commenting), authoring (and backup) should be done only on your system.</p><p><a href=\"https://floss.social/tags/indieWeb\">#<span>indieWeb</span></a> <a href=\"https://floss.social/tags/StaticGenerators\">#<span>StaticGenerators</span></a></p>",
"text": "@shawnhooper @caseynewton Web is for publishing (and commenting), authoring (and backup) should be done only on your system.#indieWeb #StaticGenerators"
},
"published": "2024-01-12T08:36:52+00:00",
"post-type": "note",
"_id": "39969426",
"_source": "7235",
"_is_read": false
}
@jcrabapple #Microdotblog is the best mix of simple UX and powerful #indieweb publishing I've found. cc: @manton
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "@tchambers",
"url": "https://indieweb.social/@tchambers",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://indieweb.social/@tchambers/111740794676783911",
"content": {
"html": "<p><span class=\"h-card\"><a class=\"u-url\" href=\"https://dmv.community/@jcrabapple\">@<span>jcrabapple</span></a></span> <a href=\"https://indieweb.social/tags/Microdotblog\">#<span>Microdotblog</span></a> is the best mix of simple UX and powerful <a href=\"https://indieweb.social/tags/indieweb\">#<span>indieweb</span></a> publishing I've found. cc: <span class=\"h-card\"><a class=\"u-url\" href=\"https://manton.org/activitypub/manton\">@<span>manton</span></a></span></p>",
"text": "@jcrabapple #Microdotblog is the best mix of simple UX and powerful #indieweb publishing I've found. cc: @manton"
},
"published": "2024-01-12T03:13:35+00:00",
"post-type": "note",
"_id": "39967918",
"_source": "7235",
"_is_read": false
}
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "@jcrabapple",
"url": "https://dmv.community/@jcrabapple",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://dmv.community/@jcrabapple/111740738638818139",
"content": {
"html": "<p><a href=\"https://dmv.community/tags/ActivityPub\">#<span>ActivityPub</span></a> Is To The <a href=\"https://dmv.community/tags/IndieWeb\">#<span>IndieWeb</span></a> As A.I. Is To Silicon Valley?</p><p><a href=\"https://bix.blog/2024/01/11/activitypub-is-to-the-indieweb-as-a-i-is-to-silicon-valley/\"><span>https://</span><span>bix.blog/2024/01/11/activitypu</span><span>b-is-to-the-indieweb-as-a-i-is-to-silicon-valley/</span></a></p>",
"text": "#ActivityPub Is To The #IndieWeb As A.I. Is To Silicon Valley?https://bix.blog/2024/01/11/activitypub-is-to-the-indieweb-as-a-i-is-to-silicon-valley/"
},
"published": "2024-01-12T02:59:20+00:00",
"post-type": "note",
"_id": "39967807",
"_source": "7235",
"_is_read": false
}
Finally built out a dark mode theme I'm reasonably happy with and made it work nice in Nuxt 3. I'm building the habit of writing up any work I've done, so here's a full breakdown of the process: https://seanedevane.com/blog/dark-mode-nuxt-3
#indieweb #frontend #darkmode #nuxt3 #nuxt #vue
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "@seanedevane",
"url": "https://infosec.exchange/@seanedevane",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://infosec.exchange/@seanedevane/111740719591764832",
"content": {
"html": "<p>Finally built out a dark mode theme I'm reasonably happy with and made it work nice in Nuxt 3. I'm building the habit of writing up any work I've done, so here's a full breakdown of the process: <a href=\"https://seanedevane.com/blog/dark-mode-nuxt-3\"><span>https://</span><span>seanedevane.com/blog/dark-mode</span><span>-nuxt-3</span></a></p><p><a href=\"https://infosec.exchange/tags/indieweb\">#<span>indieweb</span></a> <a href=\"https://infosec.exchange/tags/frontend\">#<span>frontend</span></a> <a href=\"https://infosec.exchange/tags/darkmode\">#<span>darkmode</span></a> <a href=\"https://infosec.exchange/tags/nuxt3\">#<span>nuxt3</span></a> <a href=\"https://infosec.exchange/tags/nuxt\">#<span>nuxt</span></a> <a href=\"https://infosec.exchange/tags/vue\">#<span>vue</span></a></p>",
"text": "Finally built out a dark mode theme I'm reasonably happy with and made it work nice in Nuxt 3. I'm building the habit of writing up any work I've done, so here's a full breakdown of the process: https://seanedevane.com/blog/dark-mode-nuxt-3#indieweb #frontend #darkmode #nuxt3 #nuxt #vue"
},
"published": "2024-01-12T02:54:29+00:00",
"post-type": "note",
"_id": "39967808",
"_source": "7235",
"_is_read": false
}
Tonight is one of those rare instances where my social feed seems to coalesce around one issue.
@caseynewton has pulled Platformer from #Substack, who are finding out you can’t casually walk back a position of supporting Nazis.
Let this be a lesson. Control where you publish. Tools like WordPress, Ghost, or even just plain HTML allow us to publish without the risk of getting trapped by companies who will take money from anyone, even if they shouldn’t.
#IndieWeb #blogging #fediverse
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "@shawnhooper",
"url": "https://fosstodon.org/@shawnhooper",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://fosstodon.org/@shawnhooper/111740660421319784",
"content": {
"html": "<p>Tonight is one of those rare instances where my social feed seems to coalesce around one issue. </p><p><span class=\"h-card\"><a class=\"u-url\" href=\"https://mastodon.social/@caseynewton\">@<span>caseynewton</span></a></span> has pulled Platformer from <a href=\"https://fosstodon.org/tags/Substack\">#<span>Substack</span></a>, who are finding out you can\u2019t casually walk back a position of supporting Nazis. </p><p>Let this be a lesson. Control where you publish. Tools like WordPress, Ghost, or even just plain HTML allow us to publish without the risk of getting trapped by companies who will take money from anyone, even if they shouldn\u2019t. </p><p><a href=\"https://fosstodon.org/tags/IndieWeb\">#<span>IndieWeb</span></a> <a href=\"https://fosstodon.org/tags/blogging\">#<span>blogging</span></a> <a href=\"https://fosstodon.org/tags/fediverse\">#<span>fediverse</span></a></p>",
"text": "Tonight is one of those rare instances where my social feed seems to coalesce around one issue. @caseynewton has pulled Platformer from #Substack, who are finding out you can\u2019t casually walk back a position of supporting Nazis. Let this be a lesson. Control where you publish. Tools like WordPress, Ghost, or even just plain HTML allow us to publish without the risk of getting trapped by companies who will take money from anyone, even if they shouldn\u2019t. #IndieWeb #blogging #fediverse"
},
"published": "2024-01-12T02:39:27+00:00",
"post-type": "note",
"_id": "39967739",
"_source": "7235",
"_is_read": false
}
I think subscribe the hashtag is a better way to find your interesting content.
And then according to the content, find someone who you want to follow.
Or, it is a hard way to follow someone when you first login. Because the fediverse social network doesn't have a recommendation list.
Anyway, you need to search the content by yourself, not waiting for the recommendation system for you, because there isn’t.
#fediverse #indieweb
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "@ohcoder",
"url": "https://indieweb.social/@ohcoder",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://indieweb.social/@ohcoder/111740626561619024",
"content": {
"html": "<p>I think subscribe the hashtag is a better way to find your interesting content.</p><p>And then according to the content, find someone who you want to follow.</p><p>Or, it is a hard way to follow someone when you first login. Because the fediverse social network doesn't have a recommendation list.</p><p>Anyway, you need to search the content by yourself, not waiting for the recommendation system for you, because there isn\u2019t.</p><p><a href=\"https://indieweb.social/tags/fediverse\">#<span>fediverse</span></a> <a href=\"https://indieweb.social/tags/indieweb\">#<span>indieweb</span></a></p>",
"text": "I think subscribe the hashtag is a better way to find your interesting content.And then according to the content, find someone who you want to follow.Or, it is a hard way to follow someone when you first login. Because the fediverse social network doesn't have a recommendation list.Anyway, you need to search the content by yourself, not waiting for the recommendation system for you, because there isn\u2019t.#fediverse #indieweb"
},
"published": "2024-01-12T02:30:50+00:00",
"post-type": "note",
"_id": "39967664",
"_source": "7235",
"_is_read": false
}
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2024-01-12T00:33:38+00:00",
"url": "https://werd.io/2024/how-threads-will-integrate-with-the-fediverse",
"category": [
"Technology"
],
"bookmark-of": [
"http://plasticbag.org/archives/2024/01/how-threads-will-integrate-with-the-fediverse/"
],
"name": "How Threads will integrate with the Fediverse",
"content": {
"text": "An in-depth writeup of Meta's fediverse meetup last year by Tom Coates, who was one of the roughly 20 people in attendance.\nMost of these details have been discussed and speculated on at this point, but it's good to read them in one place, and I think Tom's perspective is (as always) very good.\nThe legal issues Tom discusses here are important: I think a lot of fediverse administrators and service operators tend to hand-wave them away, but they really are big issues. I encountered some of them when I was running Known, too: people were angry their content was showing up on some other service that they hadn't opted into.\nMeta does seem to be heading into this endeavor in good faith. There's still a lot to figure out, but I think Threads will be a full, participative fediverse participant. I'm curious to see which other large network operators join them. #Technology",
"html": "<p>An in-depth writeup of Meta's fediverse meetup last year by Tom Coates, who was one of the roughly 20 people in attendance.</p>\n<p>Most of these details have been discussed and speculated on at this point, but it's good to read them in one place, and I think Tom's perspective is (as always) very good.</p>\n<p>The legal issues Tom discusses here are important: I think a lot of fediverse administrators and service operators tend to hand-wave them away, but they really are big issues. I encountered some of them when I was running Known, too: people were angry their content was showing up on some other service that they hadn't opted into.</p>\n<p>Meta does seem to be heading into this endeavor in good faith. There's still a lot to figure out, but I think Threads will be a full, participative fediverse participant. I'm curious to see which other large network operators join them. <a href=\"https://werd.io/tag/Technology\" class=\"p-category\">#Technology</a></p>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Ben Werdmuller",
"url": "https://werd.io/profile/benwerd",
"photo": "https://werd.io/file/5d388c5fb16ea14aac640912/thumb.jpg"
},
"post-type": "bookmark",
"_id": "39967449",
"_source": "191",
"_is_read": false
}
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "@enindu",
"url": "https://mastodon.social/@enindu",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://mastodon.social/@enindu/111739974984422394",
"content": {
"html": "<p>The interesting case of IP cam: <a href=\"https://enindu.com/blog/the-interesting-case-of-ip-cam\"><span>https://</span><span>enindu.com/blog/the-interestin</span><span>g-case-of-ip-cam</span></a></p><p><a href=\"https://mastodon.social/tags/blog\">#<span>blog</span></a> <a href=\"https://mastodon.social/tags/indieweb\">#<span>indieweb</span></a> <a href=\"https://mastodon.social/tags/ipcam\">#<span>ipcam</span></a> <a href=\"https://mastodon.social/tags/softwaredevelopment\">#<span>softwaredevelopment</span></a> <a href=\"https://mastodon.social/tags/go\">#<span>go</span></a> <a href=\"https://mastodon.social/tags/software\">#<span>software</span></a> <a href=\"https://mastodon.social/tags/v4l2\">#<span>v4l2</span></a></p>",
"text": "The interesting case of IP cam: https://enindu.com/blog/the-interesting-case-of-ip-cam#blog #indieweb #ipcam #softwaredevelopment #go #software #v4l2"
},
"published": "2024-01-11T23:45:08+00:00",
"post-type": "note",
"_id": "39966669",
"_source": "7235",
"_is_read": false
}
A long conversation today between @fraying and @pfefferle had me wondering if #ActivityPub is to the #IndieWeb as A.I. is to Silicon Valley.
I'm not sure I answer that question, but the conversation was interesting and so I did some #Blogging on one particular point.
https://bix.blog/2024/01/11/activitypub-is-to-the-indieweb-as-a-i-is-to-silicon-valley/
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "@bix",
"url": "https://social.lol/@bix",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://social.lol/@bix/111739963478511571",
"content": {
"html": "<p>A long conversation today between <span class=\"h-card\"><a class=\"u-url\" href=\"https://xoxo.zone/@fraying\">@<span>fraying</span></a></span> and <span class=\"h-card\"><a class=\"u-url\" href=\"https://mastodon.social/@pfefferle\">@<span>pfefferle</span></a></span> had me wondering if <a href=\"https://social.lol/tags/ActivityPub\">#<span>ActivityPub</span></a> is to the <a href=\"https://social.lol/tags/IndieWeb\">#<span>IndieWeb</span></a> as A.I. is to Silicon Valley.</p><p>I'm not sure I answer that question, but the conversation was interesting and so I did some <a href=\"https://social.lol/tags/Blogging\">#<span>Blogging</span></a> on one particular point.</p><p><a href=\"https://bix.blog/2024/01/11/activitypub-is-to-the-indieweb-as-a-i-is-to-silicon-valley/\"><span>https://</span><span>bix.blog/2024/01/11/activitypu</span><span>b-is-to-the-indieweb-as-a-i-is-to-silicon-valley/</span></a></p>",
"text": "A long conversation today between @fraying and @pfefferle had me wondering if #ActivityPub is to the #IndieWeb as A.I. is to Silicon Valley.I'm not sure I answer that question, but the conversation was interesting and so I did some #Blogging on one particular point.https://bix.blog/2024/01/11/activitypub-is-to-the-indieweb-as-a-i-is-to-silicon-valley/"
},
"published": "2024-01-11T23:42:12+00:00",
"post-type": "note",
"_id": "39966670",
"_source": "7235",
"_is_read": false
}
the time has come! the 32-bit cafe's 2023 holiday event has finally wrapped up, and all the submissions are up for display!
thank you to all the amazing #webdev folks of varying levels who participated, whether it be with a #blog post, #pixelart submission, or a webpage made about the year ending!
the #indieweb is better with you in it, and 2024 is going to be a great year for the personal web! ^^
https://32bit.cafe/holidays2023/display/
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "@xandra",
"url": "https://tilde.zone/@xandra",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://tilde.zone/@xandra/111739929646143276",
"content": {
"html": "<p>the time has come! the 32-bit cafe's 2023 holiday event has finally wrapped up, and all the submissions are up for display!</p><p>thank you to all the amazing <a href=\"https://tilde.zone/tags/webdev\">#<span>webdev</span></a> folks of varying levels who participated, whether it be with a <a href=\"https://tilde.zone/tags/blog\">#<span>blog</span></a> post, <a href=\"https://tilde.zone/tags/pixelart\">#<span>pixelart</span></a> submission, or a webpage made about the year ending!</p><p>the <a href=\"https://tilde.zone/tags/indieweb\">#<span>indieweb</span></a> is better with you in it, and 2024 is going to be a great year for the personal web! ^^</p><p><a href=\"https://32bit.cafe/holidays2023/display/\"><span>https://</span><span>32bit.cafe/holidays2023/displa</span><span>y/</span></a></p>",
"text": "the time has come! the 32-bit cafe's 2023 holiday event has finally wrapped up, and all the submissions are up for display!thank you to all the amazing #webdev folks of varying levels who participated, whether it be with a #blog post, #pixelart submission, or a webpage made about the year ending!the #indieweb is better with you in it, and 2024 is going to be a great year for the personal web! ^^https://32bit.cafe/holidays2023/display/"
},
"published": "2024-01-11T23:33:36+00:00",
"post-type": "note",
"_id": "39966548",
"_source": "7235",
"_is_read": false
}
📝 New Post: A Simple Guide to Redirects on Neocities with Eleventy
https://flamedfury.com/posts/a-simple-guide-to-redirects-on-neocities-with-eleventy/
We lack tutorials or guides for #11ty outside the big platforms. Here's my attempt at changing that.
#web #indieweb #blog
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "@flamed",
"url": "https://social.lol/@flamed",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://social.lol/@flamed/111739674802321378",
"content": {
"html": "<p>\ud83d\udcdd New Post: A Simple Guide to Redirects on Neocities with Eleventy</p><p><a href=\"https://flamedfury.com/posts/a-simple-guide-to-redirects-on-neocities-with-eleventy/\"><span>https://</span><span>flamedfury.com/posts/a-simple-</span><span>guide-to-redirects-on-neocities-with-eleventy/</span></a></p><p>We lack tutorials or guides for <a href=\"https://social.lol/tags/11ty\">#<span>11ty</span></a> outside the big platforms. Here's my attempt at changing that.</p><p><a href=\"https://social.lol/tags/web\">#<span>web</span></a> <a href=\"https://social.lol/tags/indieweb\">#<span>indieweb</span></a> <a href=\"https://social.lol/tags/blog\">#<span>blog</span></a></p>",
"text": "\ud83d\udcdd New Post: A Simple Guide to Redirects on Neocities with Eleventyhttps://flamedfury.com/posts/a-simple-guide-to-redirects-on-neocities-with-eleventy/We lack tutorials or guides for #11ty outside the big platforms. Here's my attempt at changing that.#web #indieweb #blog"
},
"published": "2024-01-11T22:28:47+00:00",
"post-type": "note",
"_id": "39966055",
"_source": "7235",
"_is_read": false
}
@james #IndieWeb is for me largely negatively defined: not using centralized silos like Twitter, GitHub, Substack and building network of independent websites collaborating together. Particular technologies and protocols are just secondary.
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "@mcepl",
"url": "https://floss.social/@mcepl",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://floss.social/@mcepl/111739531956673196",
"content": {
"html": "<p><span class=\"h-card\"><a class=\"u-url\" href=\"https://strangeobject.space/@james\">@<span>james</span></a></span> <a href=\"https://floss.social/tags/IndieWeb\">#<span>IndieWeb</span></a> is for me largely negatively defined: not using centralized silos like Twitter, GitHub, Substack and building network of independent websites collaborating together. Particular technologies and protocols are just secondary.</p>",
"text": "@james #IndieWeb is for me largely negatively defined: not using centralized silos like Twitter, GitHub, Substack and building network of independent websites collaborating together. Particular technologies and protocols are just secondary."
},
"published": "2024-01-11T21:52:28+00:00",
"post-type": "note",
"_id": "39965766",
"_source": "7235",
"_is_read": false
}
@drewdevault Certainly not for you, but generally, whether this is not the moment, where #IndieWeb would be more robust, because somebody would have to target all thousands and thousands of instances of gitweb/cgit. Just thinking aloud. Perhaps, this is the moment for git-bug as well?
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "@mcepl",
"url": "https://floss.social/@mcepl",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://floss.social/@mcepl/111739522164318954",
"content": {
"html": "<p><span class=\"h-card\"><a class=\"u-url\" href=\"https://fosstodon.org/@drewdevault\">@<span>drewdevault</span></a></span> Certainly not for you, but generally, whether this is not the moment, where <a href=\"https://floss.social/tags/IndieWeb\">#<span>IndieWeb</span></a> would be more robust, because somebody would have to target all thousands and thousands of instances of gitweb/cgit. Just thinking aloud. Perhaps, this is the moment for git-bug as well?</p>",
"text": "@drewdevault Certainly not for you, but generally, whether this is not the moment, where #IndieWeb would be more robust, because somebody would have to target all thousands and thousands of instances of gitweb/cgit. Just thinking aloud. Perhaps, this is the moment for git-bug as well?"
},
"published": "2024-01-11T21:49:58+00:00",
"post-type": "note",
"_id": "39965767",
"_source": "7235",
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}