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Fediverse

Communicate with the world.

This category can be followed from the open social web via the handle fediverse@caint.ie

218 Topics 538 Posts
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    Week in Fediverse :fediverse_light:W
    Week in Fediverse 2026-01-23Servers- stegodon v1.6.0- Wafrn v2026.01.04- Gush v0.0.28- Bonfire v1.0.1- Mastodon v4.5.5- BadgeFed v0.0.2- snac v2.89- GoToSocial v0.20.3- Vernissage Server v1.29.0- Loops v1.0.0-beta.8- PieFed v1.5.3Clients- Kimis v1.22.184- Aria v1.4.1- Blorp v1.10.2- Loops Mobile App v1.0.1.21Tools and Plugins- ActivityPub Web Application Firewall-----#WeekInFediverse #Fediverse #ActivityPubPrevious edition: https://mitra.social/objects/019bc8ef-5fcd-5b01-afc5-0d5fbd0db61e
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    wakest ⁂L
    @ralfkraemer how far along are you? Have you looked at apps like @blorp yet that already support Lemmy and Piefed APIs?
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    BTFreeB
    @darkwolf@hear-me.social THANK YOU! I'm here to help anyone else set up theirs. Matrix has a growing community for ActivityPub folks. Peertube included. Let's all grow and work together. If I don't know an answer, I know a place we can find it!
  • Real Community, Not Algorithmic Spectacle

    dotcons fediverse
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    #OMN (Open Media Network)I
    The networks we use shape who we are – and the networks we are given by #dotcons are designed to make us spectators. Every interaction is reduced to a metric: a like, a share, a click. We are data points to be monetised, attention to be harvested, behaviour to be predicted and sold. In these systems, connection is shallow, fleeting, and ultimately extractive.The #4opens offer a different path. When your networks are open, knowable, and modifiable, you stop being a statistic and start being a person again. Not just a profile, not just a follower count – a participant in a living community. You can see who is contributing, who is caring, and who is struggling. You can understand the shape of your social environment and intervene meaningfully, rather than being nudged along invisible pipelines designed to maximise someone else’s profit.Open systems give us tools to know each other better. Not superficially, through algorithmic suggestions, but genuinely: by making relationships and contributions visible, traceable, and shareable in ways that respect the participants. Collaboration becomes possible without asking for permission. Knowledge, help, and support flow where they are needed. Trust can be rebuilt across distance and time, because the infrastructure encourages transparency, accountability, and mutual care.This isn’t only about technology, it’s about escaping the isolation of the #dotcons. Social media was sold to us as connection, but it atomised communities into consumable fragments. It told us we belonged to brands, not to people. The #4opens remind us that belonging is not transactional, and connection is not a product.In open communities, relationships matter more than metrics. Reciprocity replaces algorithms. Long levity replaces virality. Care replaces performance. People organize not for attention, but for mutual survival, growth, and flourishing.You can get a glimpse of the change and challenge in bodied in such projects as the #Fediverse. It can be radical: networks of care that scale, knowledge that accumulates instead of being enclosed, resilience that emerges from participation rather than extraction. Belonging becomes real again, and communities can function as spaces of power and support rather than channels for profit.The choice is ours: continue to live as data points in someone else’s spectacle, or reclaim the digital commons as a terrain for genuine human connection. With the #4opens, the infrastructure is ready. The question is whether we will use it to rebuild what has been lost.
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    Stefan BohacekS
    ActivityPub, the protocol that powers much of the fediverse and allows the various fediverse platforms and servers to talk to each other, has become an official W3C standard 8 years ago!https://www.w3.org/news/2018/activitypub-is-now-a-w3c-recommendation/#fediverse #activitypub #standards #OpenWeb #W3C #anniversary #OTD #OnThisDay
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    Dawid WiktorD
    Another good reason to move to fediverse. Unlike Threads, the feed will remain clean and without annoyances.Ad-free is a good feature nowadays.https://techcrunch.com/2026/01/21/threads-rolls-out-ads-to-all-users-worldwide/#fediverse #Vebinet #Mastodon #Threads #socialmedia
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    VebinetV
    Vebinet is and will be ad-free and respecting you.ok, now you can continue scrolling to look at kittens and capybaras.#Vebinet #fediverse #Mastodon #socialmedia
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    julianJ
    @lqdev@lqdev.me indeed, now I no longer see raw markdown
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    julianJ
    @lqdev@lqdev.me hey, welcome to the Fediverse! Couple smol things… When I try to resolve your post by URL, I get a Person back, whoops! Not sure why on NodeBB, I see raw markdown. Was going to inspect source.content, but see #1 <img class=“not-responsive emoji” src=“https://activitypub.space/assets/plugins/nodebb-plugin-emoji/emoji/android/1f613.png?v=aa0c143f12c” title=“” />
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    Stefan BohacekS
    @shironeko I'd recommend going through the linked conversations about potential approaches, but in my mind, I'd imagine each server would reject replies that don't match the reply settings.Yes, there will be servers, either running outdated fediverse software, or designed to ignore the settings, and the replies might be visible there, but their reach will be limited.Obviously you can't stop people from talking about you in their dark corner far away, just like screenshots easily work around quote permissions. Or someone writing a blog post about you.Still, what we have now is pretty subpar and I've seen too many people leaving the fediverse because they feel unsafe and unwelcome. And they tell their friends who will never come here. This has to change.
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    Lucy (PieFed edition) [she/faer]C
    [image: 453fpGt4qBMVYyI.png] Of all the promises of Fedi, I think this one is the least believable
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    Anuj AhoojaQ
    @BrennpunktUA they have a fork of the Bsky social-app client codebase, and from what it looks like they're still using the Bsky AppView in the backend. That said, their users are on their own PDSes, which is the most important aspect of data ownership for users.AppViews take time to build, and most new projects start with Bsky's client to get an easy jumpstart to test features out.@darnell @ricci
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    C
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    IFTASA
    This post is part of an ongoing series exploring the findings and forecasts from the 2025 Social Web Trust & Safety Needs Assessment Report. Now that we have three years of data, we’ll not only dive into the 2025 results, but also take a broader look at how key patterns have shifted over time. From volunteer burnout to federation policies, this series will highlight what’s changing, what’s staying the same, and what that means for the future of trust and safety on the social web.The 2025 Social Web Trust & Safety Report Is HereBehind the Numbers: Who Moderates the Social Web?Volunteers, burnout, and the people holding the lineWho is doing the work to keep the social web safe? Who responds to reports, blocks malicious actors, answers legal requests, and supports users in distress? According to the 2025 Social Web Trust & Safety Needs Assessment Report, it is mostly unpaid, overstretched volunteers. This year’s findings confirm what many already know from experience: the people making moderation possible are holding up a system that is growing heavier by the day.Moderators are doing everything, often aloneMost of the people keeping platforms safe are not working in large teams or focused roles. They are volunteers running small or medium-sized services who also manage hosting, community building, and legal issues.More than half of all respondents said they were the only moderator or part of a very small teamOnly 13% said their main focus was moderationThe rest balance moderation with technical administration, community management, and legal/compliance activities There is no clear boundary between roles on most services. Instead, safety work is something moderators have to squeeze in along with everything else.In 2025, 45% of respondents reported handling three or more roles, down from 52% in 2023. This includes those selecting all four roles (moderation, systems admin, community management, and legal/compliance). This slight but consistent decline may indicate some separation of duties as communities mature. However, it could also reflect role fatigue, reduced participation, or the departure of volunteers who were previously covering multiple responsibilities.The mod-to-member ratio is getting worse, not betterBased on service account totals, the average ratio of moderators to accounts is now 1:24,288 (total accounts). In 2023 this was 1:6,167. This change is likely not due to improved efficiency, it more likely reflects a growing burden on the same limited pool of volunteers. While some of the largest instances have dedicated teams, the majority of services are run by one or two people. There is no easy way to scale up this labour, and no capacity to absorb new or worsening threats.Moderators are burning outOne in five respondents reported that their moderation work had a negative impact on their mental health. This includes trauma, exhaustion, or withdrawal from community life. This number has been consistent since 2023, roughly 20% report the same each year.The harms moderators are exposed to include spam floods, disinformation campaigns, hate speech, harassment, and occasionally CSAM or reports of serious real-world harm. Most teams do not have access to legal advice, mental health resources, or trauma-informed processes. “There is no backup. If I disappear for a week, everything piles up” said one respondent. Many moderators do not feel safe or supported. Even those who continue to moderate effectively report a high cost to doing so.We are not onboarding enough new people Although the report shows a modest increase in average experience overall, it also reveals a decline in the number of new moderators entering the ecosystem. In many communities, experienced moderators have been doing the work for years, often without formal support or clear succession planning. Moderator experience appears to be splitting into two distinct groups: a growing number of early-career moderators with fewer than three years of experience, and a smaller but rising group with six to ten years. Those in the middle, particularly with three to six years of experience, are falling away sharply. Without stronger onboarding and retention support, the gap between newer volunteers and long-time moderators is likely to widen. If we don’t improve the pathways for new moderators to enter, learn, and stay, the system may not hold. The number of people doing the work will continue to shrink, even as threats increase.This is not sustainable Decentralised platforms pride themselves on being community-led and member-directed. But community care requires people. And right now, those people are overwhelmed. If we want the social web to remain open, resilient, and safe for marginalised users, we need to support the humans at its core. What will help: shared tools and templates for policy, onboarding, and moderation; access to wellbeing support and peer networks; sustainable funding for training, stipends, and community-led projects; less duplication and more shared infrastructure across services.We’ll be sharing more posts in the coming weeks, each looking at a different part of the report. From big-picture trends to behind-the-scenes insights, our goal is to make the findings useful, readable, and relevant to the people doing the work. If you’re part of that work, or thinking about getting involved, we hope you’ll follow along.Support the people doing the workIFTAS supports the moderators, administrators, and community volunteers who make the social web safer and more resilient. If you believe this work matters, please consider making a donation. Even small contributions help fund training, tools, and care for the people holding the line.Donate to IFTAS today.
  • 3 Day Warning for the #SocialBC Migration

    socialbc fediverse mastodon
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    Chris AlemanyC
    @britt fingers crossed!
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    Jason Bowen 🇺🇦J
    @kkarhan I first read "weird AI propaganda" as "Weird Al propaganda" and wondered how he'd become involved in this, lol
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    Scott WilsonS
    @jon @Vivaldi I’m workin’ on it, Jon!!!
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    Der zuversichtliche DanielD
    @lxplm @DresdnerForschungswerk ist das was für Deine Arbeit?
  • the time is now...

    Random fediverse atproto activitypub
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    julianJ
    @jupiter_rowland@hub.netzgemeinde.eu @fedinautus@mastodon.social which one’s the coffee martini?
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    KorbsK
    @julian Yeah thanks for quicker and more simple setup process as well, Discourse was not simple to get running on a janky network like mine.