ポッドキャスト用のブログで、インディーウェブについてちょこちょこ書いてます。
https://nejimaki-radio.com/tag/indieweb/
#インディーウェブ #indieweb

I really like personal homepages and have quite a list of them bookmarked. I'll post one every week until I don't. So here's Cool Personal Homepages #CPH Vol. 5: {datagubbe} https://datagubbe.se/

#SmallWeb #indieweb #PersonalSites #homepage

Hello again, micro.blog! I dropped off here in 2020 due to technical issues apparently, but I think I’m back?

Short intro: gRegor, he/him, San Diego, try to make people laugh (or groan from puns), software developer, IndieWeb enthusiast, and COVID cautious.

A couple of days ago in an informal discussion in the #indieweb chat channel about how different people view #Mastodon, the #fediverse, or #Bluesky, and services like #Bridgy & #BridgyFed quite differently, I noted¹ that one big unspoken difference was how things on the web last over time, from the traditional persistent web, vs the newer and growing ephemeral web.

There is the publicly viewable #OpenWeb that many of us take for granted, meaning the web that is persistent, that lasts over time, and thanks to being #curlable, that the Internet Archive archives, and that a plurality of search engines see and index (robots.txt allowing). The HTML + CSS + media files declarative web.

Then there are the https APIs that return JSON "web", the thing that I’ve started calling the ephemeral web, the set of things that are here today, briefly, gone tomorrow. I’ve previously used the more provocative phrase js;dr (JavaScript required, Didn’t Read) for this #ephemeralWeb, yet like many things, it turns out there is a spectrum from ephemeral to persistent.


One popular example on that spectrum that’s closer to the ephemeral edge is anything on a Mastodon server running v4 (or later as of this writing) of the software. (I’m not bothering to discuss the examples of walled garden social media silos because I expect we will continue to see their demise² over time.)

For example, the Internet Archive version of the shutdown notice for the queer(.)af Mastodon server, is visibly blank:

https://web.archive.org/web/20240112165635/https://queer.af/@postmaster/111733741786950083

Note: only a single Internet Archive snapshot was made of that post.

However if you View Source, you can find the entirety of that #queerAF post duplicated across a couple of invisible-to-the-user meta tags inside the raw HTML:

 "**TL;DR: Queer[.]AF will close on 2024-04-12** …"  

[.] added to avoid linking to a dead domain.

Note: such meta tags in js;dr pages were part of the motivation to specify metaformats.

To be clear, the shutdown of queer(.)af was a tragedy and not the fault of the creators, administrators etc., but rather one of the unfortunate outcomes of using some ccTLDs, country-code top level domains, that risk sudden draconian rules, domain renewal price hikes, or other unpredictable risks due to the politics, turmoil, regime changes etc. of the countries that administrate such domains.


Nearly the entirety of every Mastodon server, every post, every reply, is ephemeral.

When a Mastodon server shuts down, all its posts disappear from the surface of the web, forever.

Perhaps internet archeologists of the future will discover such dead permalinks, check the Internet Archive, find apparent desolation, and a few of them will be curious enough to use View Source tools to unearth parts of those posts, unintentionally preserved inside ceremonial meta tags next to dead scripts disconnected from databases and an empty shell of a body.  

All reply-contexts of and replies to such posts and conversations lost, like threads unraveled from an ancient tapestry, scattered to the winds.


If you’re reading this post in your Mastodon reader, on either the website of your Mastodon account, or in a proprietary native client application, you should be able to click through, perhaps on the date-time stamp displayed to you, to view the original post on my website, where it is served in relatively simple declarative HTML + CSS with a bit of progressive enhancement script.

Because I serve declarative content, my posts are both findable across a variety of services & search engines, and archived by the Internet Archive. Even if my site goes down, snapshots or archives will be viewable elsewhere, with nearly the same fidelity of viewing them directly on my site.

This design for longevity is both deliberate, and the default for which the web was designed. It’s also one of the explicit principles in the IndieWeb community.

If that resonates with you, if creating, writing, & building things that last matter to you, choose web tools, services, and software that support the persistence & longevity of your work.

#persistentWeb #longWeb #LongNow

This is post 10 of #100PostsOfIndieWeb. #100Posts

https://tantek.com/2024/035/t2/indiewebcamp-brighton-tickets-available
→ 🔮


Post glossary:

API (Application Programming Interface)
  https://indieweb.org/API
Bluesky
  https://indieweb.org/Bluesky
Bridgy
  https://brid.gy/
Bridgy Fed
  https://fed.brid.gy/
ccTLD (country-code top level domain)
  https://indieweb.org/ccTLD
curlable
  https://indieweb.org/curlable
declarative web
  https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/about/webvision/full/#thedeclarativeweb
Internet Archive
  https://archive.org/
js;dr (JavaScript required; Didn’t Read)
  https://tantek.com/2015/069/t1/js-dr-javascript-required-dead
JSON
  https://indieweb.org/JSON
longevity
  https://indieweb.org/longevity
Mastodon
  https://indieweb.org/Mastodon
metaformats
  https://microformats.org/wiki/metaformats
permalink
  https://indieweb.org/permalink
principles in the IndieWeb community
  https://indieweb.org/principles
progressive enhancement
  https://indieweb.org/progressive_enhancement
reply
  https://indieweb.org/reply
reply-context
  https://indieweb.org/reply-context
robots.txt
  https://indieweb.org/robots_txt
social media
  https://indieweb.org/social_media
silo
  https://indieweb.org/silo
View Source
  https://firefox-source-docs.mozilla.org/devtools-user/view_source/index.html


¹ https://chat.indieweb.org/2024-02-13#t1707845454695700
² https://indieweb.org/site-deaths
#indieweb #Mastodon #fediverse #Bluesky #Bridgy #BridgyFed #OpenWeb #curlable #ephemeralWeb #queerAF #persistentWeb #longWeb #LongNow #100PostsOfIndieWeb #100Posts

Hello again, micro.blog! I dropped off here in 2020 due to technical issues apparently, but I think I’m back?

Short intro: gRegor, he/him, San Diego, try to make people laugh (or groan from puns), software developer, IndieWeb enthusiast, and COVID cautious.

I love #arcbrowser but hate how it broke all my chrome bookmarklets. Turns out there is an easy fix.

https://bryanmanio.com/blog/how-to-fix-bookmarklets-in-arc-browser/

#indieweb #blogging

Hello again, micro.blog! I dropped off here in 2020 due to technical issues apparently, but I think I’m back?

Short intro: gRegor, he/him, San Diego, try to make people laugh (or groan from puns), software developer, IndieWeb enthusiast, and COVID cautious.

A couple of days ago in an informal discussion in the #indieweb chat channel about how different people view #Mastodon, the #fediverse, or #Bluesky, and services like #Bridgy & #BridgyFed quite differently, I noted¹ that one big unspoken difference was how things on the web last over time, from the traditi... tantek.com
A couple of days ago in an informal discussion in the #indieweb chat channel about how different people view #Mastodon, the #fediverse, or #Bluesky, and services like #Bridgy & #BridgyFed quite differently, I noted¹ that one big unspoken difference was how things on the web last over time, from the traditional persistent web, vs the newer and growing ephemeral web.

There is the publicly viewable #OpenWeb that many of us take for granted, meaning the web that is persistent, that lasts over time, and thanks to being #curlable, that the Internet Archive archives, and that a plurality of search engines see and index (robots.txt allowing). The HTML + CSS + media files declarative web.

Then there are the https APIs that return JSON "web", the thing that I’ve started calling the ephemeral web, the set of things that are here today, briefly, gone tomorrow. I’ve previously used the more provocative phrase js;dr (JavaScript required, Didn’t Read) for this #ephemeralWeb, yet like many things, it turns out there is a spectrum from ephemeral to persistent.


One popular example on that spectrum that’s closer to the ephemeral edge is anything on a Mastodon server running v4 (or later as of this writing) of the software. (I’m not bothering to discuss the examples of walled garden social media silos because I expect we will continue to see their demise² over time.)

For example, the Internet Archive version of the shutdown notice for the queer(.)af Mastodon server, is visibly blank:

https://web.archive.org/web/20240112165635/https://queer.af/@postmaster/111733741786950083

Note: only a single Internet Archive snapshot was made of that post.

However if you View Source, you can find the entirety of that #queerAF post duplicated across a couple of invisible-to-the-user meta tags inside the raw HTML:

 "**TL;DR: Queer[.]AF will close on 2024-04-12** …"  

[.] added to avoid linking to a dead domain.

Note: such meta tags in js;dr pages were part of the motivation to specify metaformats.

To be clear, the shutdown of queer(.)af was a tragedy and not the fault of the creators, administrators etc., but rather one of the unfortunate outcomes of using some ccTLDs, country-code top level domains, that risk sudden draconian rules, domain renewal price hikes, or other unpredictable risks due to the politics, turmoil, regime changes etc. of the countries that administrate such domains.


Nearly the entirety of every Mastodon server, every post, every reply, is ephemeral.

When a Mastodon server shuts down, all its posts disappear from the surface of the web, forever.

Perhaps internet archeologists of the future will discover such dead permalinks, check the Internet Archive, find apparent desolation, and a few of them will be curious enough to use View Source tools to unearth parts of those posts, unintentionally preserved inside ceremonial meta tags next to dead scripts disconnected from databases and an empty shell of a body.  

All reply-contexts of and replies to such posts and conversations lost, like threads unraveled from an ancient tapestry, scattered to the winds.


If you’re reading this post in your Mastodon reader, on either the website of your Mastodon account, or in a proprietary native client application, you should be able to click through, perhaps on the date-time stamp displayed to you, to view the original post on my website, where it is served in relatively simple declarative HTML + CSS with a bit of progressive enhancement script.

Because I serve declarative content, my posts are both findable across a variety of services & search engines, and archived by the Internet Archive. Even if my site goes down, snapshots or archives will be viewable elsewhere, with nearly the same fidelity of viewing them directly on my site.

This design for longevity is both deliberate, and the default for which the web was designed. It’s also one of the explicit principles in the IndieWeb community.

If that resonates with you, if creating, writing, & building things that last matter to you, choose web tools, services, and software that support the persistence & longevity of your work.

#persistentWeb #longWeb #LongNow

This is post 10 of #100PostsOfIndieWeb. #100Posts

https://tantek.com/2024/035/t2/indiewebcamp-brighton-tickets-available
→ 🔮


Post glossary:

API (Application Programming Interface)
  https://indieweb.org/API
Bluesky
  https://indieweb.org/Bluesky
Bridgy
  https://brid.gy/
Bridgy Fed
  https://fed.brid.gy/
ccTLD (country-code top level domain)
  https://indieweb.org/ccTLD
curlable
  https://indieweb.org/curlable
declarative web
  https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/about/webvision/full/#thedeclarativeweb
Internet Archive
  https://archive.org/
js;dr (JavaScript required; Didn’t Read)
  https://tantek.com/2015/069/t1/js-dr-javascript-required-dead
JSON
  https://indieweb.org/JSON
longevity
  https://indieweb.org/longevity
Mastodon
  https://indieweb.org/Mastodon
metaformats
  https://microformats.org/wiki/metaformats
permalink
  https://indieweb.org/permalink
principles in the IndieWeb community
  https://indieweb.org/principles
progressive enhancement
  https://indieweb.org/progressive_enhancement
reply
  https://indieweb.org/reply
reply-context
  https://indieweb.org/reply-context
robots.txt
  https://indieweb.org/robots_txt
social media
  https://indieweb.org/social_media
silo
  https://indieweb.org/silo
View Source
  https://firefox-source-docs.mozilla.org/devtools-user/view_source/index.html


¹ https://chat.indieweb.org/2024-02-13#t1707845454695700
² https://indieweb.org/site-deaths

Mastodon and public data

ICYMI: Issue 31 of the 11ty Bundle Blog is out: v3.0.0-alpha.5 arrives...Release of v4.0 of the eleventy-img plugin...Don't miss next week's meetup...And 9 posts, and 4 sites to see.

#11ty #eleventy @eleventy #webdevelopment
#indieweb

https://11tybundle.dev/blog/11ty-bundle-31/

Another new blog post in my People series: Breaking Bread With a Pagan.
Recounting the one of the earliest times I can recall having my beliefs challenged.

#IndieWeb #SmallWeb #PersonalSites #Paganism #Christianity
https://vzqk50.com/blog/people/breaking-bread-with-a-pagan/

What he said (about the indieweb)

The internet has always been made of people, but it has not always been people-first. The indieweb reminds us that humanity is the most important thing, and that nobody should own our ability to connect, form relationships, express ourselves, be creative, learn from each other, and embrace our differences and similarities. …

https://lars-christian.com/notes/f4348cf0cb/
#indieweb

"The vital thing is not webmastery, but what the websites people make represent: the democratization of information, the empowerment of the individual and the ethos of digital citizenship."

"The web is so much more than a tool or a list of applications. It is so much more than a network. It’s us. And how we use it, access it, and what we say and do on it increasingly defines us."

Reflections on what the web was and what it may be yet:

#smallweb #neocities #indieweb

https://mikegrindle.com/posts/web-master

The recent chatter about #microformats turning 20 reminded me I’d re-found this book by @johnallsopp when I was clearing out the loft a few years ago.

I kept putting microformats into my markup for years, even though I was convinced no one was using them any more. Then I discovered people had moved on to v2 in #indieweb circles and I had some catching up to do 😂

ok so here is an #introduction on a new instance

feel free to call me fami, justin, onemuri; whatever you see fit
i use it/its pronouns (masc pronouns outside of english) and i am a lot of queer mixed with disability

i am a co-admin of this instance, mostly doing janitor stuff and the like

i am one of the 3 owners of a wii and one of 10 owners of a 3ds on fedi. hit me up if you want some mario kart or smash bros tho :yeah:

i also do art and try to rewrite my website as i no longer like the way it looks. AI/techbros/fossbros DNI i hate you with every fiber of my being.

if youre looking to follow a fellow disabled transmasc-revolving fella who games and draws, or youre into similar things, feel free to follow (unless you are under 18 or post content illegal in my jurisdiction)

fun fact: i love bananas and mangos
also plushie collectors pls interact i also collect plushies

#gaming #VideoGames #wii #3ds #disabled #ActuallyAutistic #IndieWeb #pokemon #plushie #art #DigitalArt #ArtistsOnMastodon #furry #webmaster #queer #transmasc #transgender #salmacian #LGBTQ #BoostMe

If you're able to see this post (on the Fediverse) yay! That means your admin hasn't blocked Bridgy Fed which I use to bridge my website with the Fediverse so I can chat to y'all.

This is likely due to recent discussion around the upcoming BlueSky bridge and opt-out being the default decision.

I don't dispute the freedom or choice to block Bridgy, and am definitely taking some time to think about how I feel about the varying thoughts, but the main thing is that it looks like several admins have blocked Bridgy altogether, resulting in not just the blocking of the upcoming BlueSky bridge (at a separate domain under brid.gy) but also classes Bridgy as Tier 0:

Tier 0 is a combined blocklist of only the worst actors, and it exists to provide one blocklist to which surely no one can object as a baseline for others. It's the perfect starting list for any new mastodon admin.

So it could be my time interacting with the Fediverse is going to be cut short, and I'll be screaming into the void very much moreso 😅

@luis_in_brief That’s their service to the community to remind you that WordPress (or any other blogging platform) is just for publishing blogs, but that authoring should be done locally, because that’s the place where your valuable content should stay. And when you get there, you recognize that static generators are actually a good idea. ;) #indieWeb

Twenty years and two days ago, @KevinMarks.com (@KevinMarks@xoxo.zone @KevinMarks) and I introduced #microformats in a conference presentation.

I wrote a long retrospective last year: https://tantek.com/2023/047/t1/nineteen-years-microformats

Since that post nearly a year ago, here are the top three updates & interesting developments in microformats:

1. Growing rel=me adoption for distributed verification (✅ in Mastodon etc.)
 * Wikipedia: https://tantek.com/2023/139/t1/wikipedia-supports-indieweb-rel-me
 * Threads: https://tantek.com/2023/234/t1/threads-supports-indieweb-rel-me
 * omg.lol profile links by default: https://home.omg.lol/info/profile-items

2. A proposal to merge h-review into h-entry, since reviews are in practice always entries with a bit more information:
 * https://github.com/microformats/h-entry/issues/32
 
3. #metaformats adoptions, implementations, and iteration
 * There was growing practical interest in metaformats, so I updated the spec accordingly
 * A half dozen implementations shipped: https://indieweb.org/metaformats#IndieWeb_Examples
 * Active discussion for evolving metaformats to support more real world use-cases: https://github.com/microformats/metaformats/issues

Hard to believe it’s been 20 years of iterating and evolving microformats, to #microformats2, growing adoption as #IndieWeb building blocks, distributed verification (those green checkmarks) in #Mastodon and across the #fediverse, and implementing metaformats parsing to standardize parsing various meta tags for link previews into equivalent microformats2.

From last year’s activity, it’s clear there’s more use-cases, implementer interest, and community activity than ever.  Looking forward to seeing what we can build in 2024.


Post Glossary

h-entry
  https://microformats.org/wiki/h-entry
h-review
  https://microformats.org/wiki/h-review
link-preview
  https://indieweb.org/link-preview
metaformats
  https://microformats.org/wiki/metaformats
microformats
  https://microformats.org/wiki/
microformats2
  https://microformats.org/wiki/microformats2
rel-me
  https://microformats.org/wiki/rel-me
#microformats #metaformats #microformats2 #IndieWeb #Mastodon #fediverse

👋 Hi there, I'm in the indieweb.org community. That page monitors some Mastodon tag feeds for public posts with "#indieweb".