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openvibe, to mastodon
@openvibe@mastodon.social avatar

🚀 Exciting News! 🚀

Openvibe now fully supports both Nostr and Mastodon protocols! 🌐📲
Experience seamless crossposting and a unified timeline for all your social interactions 🐙

👉 Learn more & download the app at https://openvibe.social

PS: Next up - Bluesky 🦋


1/2

Openvibe app screenshot. Crosspost to Nostr and Mastodon. At once.
Openvibe app screenshot. Nostr and Mastodon posts in one timeline.

Fitik,

@openvibe Pretty cool, but is it open source? I couldn't find a link on a website

dansup, to random
@dansup@mastodon.social avatar

I'm not perfect, which is why I listen to feedback and implement it accordingly.

Let me give you an example, @kyva commented on a post I made mentioning our onboarding flow is far from perfect.

Instead of ignoring them, or trying to justify it, I asked for their feedback.

They responded with mockups that solve the issue, so I let them know we'll be implementing this in our new app!

I just finished it, and can't wait to ship the new app!!

Keep the feedback coming! ❤️

https://mastodon.social/@pixelfed/112418642465827956

Fitik,

Agree, there's a good idea, it could be something similar to peertube instances, with some info

https://joinpeertube.org/instances

(But I'm scared that this could be overwhelming)

smallcircles, to fediverse
@smallcircles@social.coop avatar

Hey, which app allows an to be used as a ?

https://social.coop/@smallcircles/112414539433136490

#❓

Fitik,

@smallcircles Doesn't seem to work on mbin (kbin fork)

dansup, to random
@dansup@mastodon.social avatar

I’m working on fixing PeerTube, Hubzilla and Friendica support in @pixelfed

But wait, there’s one more thing: We’re also adding federation support for Lemmy/Kbin/Mobilizon and other fediverse platforms.

Maybe you can do everything with a single (pixelfed) fediverse account 😎

Fitik,

Seeing this post from mbin (kbin fork), I am looking forward to it! Sounds exciting

EU_Commission, to random
@EU_Commission@social.network.europa.eu avatar

Our commitment to the fediverse is here to stay.

We are working on a solution to ensure our continued presence on your feeds, taking full advantage of Mastodon's identity portability.

And we are even growing the team behind our Mastodon presence, increasing efforts to engage with your comments on our posts.

We are fully committed to being a real part of the conversation in the fediverse.

Interested in our next steps? Follow us as we take on this new chapter.

Fitik,

@EU_Commission Thank you so much, open source is the way to go

wagesj45, to kbin
@wagesj45@mastodon.jordanwages.com avatar

Testing out #mbin because I just couldn't stand the timeout errors on #kbin anymore. Does anyone know if mbin pulls in upline changes from kbin, or is it a hard fork at this point?

Fitik,

@wagesj45 I know I answer a bit late but it's a hard fork as far as I'm aware

dansup, to Pixelfed
@dansup@mastodon.social avatar

Pixelfed was forked, I joined their discord and gave them a piece of my mind

Forks fucking rule, I'm happy to see this. Open source is crucial to the fediverse, and while we all might not agree on everything, it feels amazing to desire to work with forks

Y'all are the real winners, even more so when devs like me do the unthinkable and bring awareness to forks

Fitik,

@dansup Looks like a very healthy reaction! You're a great dev, dansup!

LaurensHof, (edited ) to fediverse
@LaurensHof@fediversereport.com avatar

Last Week in Fediverse – ep 51

The contours of the fediverse as the open social web, in a vision that goes beyond decentralised microblogging, are starting to become more visible, with more bridges, connections and other types of media getting pulled into the fediverse. It also raises the question of expectations and boundaries, with different visions of the fediverse arising: that of a highly interconnected space, or with many more insular communities and groups that are loosely connected.

WordPress ActivityPub plugin updates to v2.0

The WordPress ActivityPub plugin has been updated to version 2.0. The major feature of the release is better comment federation. Comments are now properly threaded, which makes it much easier to follow and understand threads where people are replying to each other. Comments are now also bidirectionally federated. Creator @pfefferle explains:

“When you respond to comments from the fediverse on your blog, they will now be federated. This allows you to finally engage in (threaded) communication back and forth directly from the comment section of your blog!”

This makes the plugin more valuable for bloggers who do not have another fediverse account for example, allowing them to respond directly from the blog, with their responses now showing up in the fediverse as well.

Comments made by people who use the reply feature on the website itself do not get federated. Pfefferle explains that this is mainly a legal question for GDPR compliance. Work is still continuing on the plugin: Pfefferle mentions working with the Akismet team to make sure that it’s spam detection system also works with ActivityPub, as well as working on a Profile Editor UI.

Podcasting news

Fediverse podcast hosting platform Castopod has released a discovery platform for all the podcasts that are hosted on Castopod. You can find the index at https://index.castopod.org/. It gives a nice visual overview of all the podcasts, which you can filter by category, language, or any search term you want.

In order to build this index, Castopod uses the Podcast Index Database. Incidentally, the Podcast Index is currently working on building a bridge between their database and the fediverse. Developer Dave Jones released the code for the alpha version this week. This bridge allows you to follow podcasts directly in your fediverse client. The bridge is still in active development, but a sneak peek can be seen here.

Some podcast news of my own as well: WeDistribute has launched the new podcast series Decentered. In this first episode, Sean, Damon I and talk about Creation and Discovery. Go check it out!

Bluesky has 3 million accounts

Some news from Bluesky: yesterday the network reached the milestone of 3 million accounts. This milestone comes 2 months after hitting the 2 million mark. While there are no official numbers for Monthly Active Users (MAU), Kuba Suder estimates around 500k MAU, based on the daily and weekly active users. For comparision, Mastodon has between 1 million and 1.5 million MAU, depending on the source.

Bluesky’s growth is far from over, as Bluesky said that that ‘invite codes are going away soon’. This is different from opening up the network for federation, which is also planned for early 2024.

Bluesky is explicitly positioning itself as a place that is welcoming and suitable for news organisations. Bluesky team member Emily published an explainer how newsrooms can use Bluesky for the upcoming election season. Not everyone is convinced the network is ready yet though, as ændra explains some features that the network needs to be fit for purpose.

In other news

Another write-up of the meeting that Meta held last December to discuss the fediverse, by Tom Coates. It contains some more details about the planned roadmap, and how the integration is planned to happen in separate steps. What strikes me is that both this report, and the notes by Johannes Ernst, mention that they feel they have not gotten a clear answer to the most important question: ‘Why is Meta doing this?’. Tom Coates writes: “I’ll be blunt – I didn’t find [Meta’s explanation] enormously convincing but it was interesting and I’m sure there’s some truth to it”. And Johannes Ernst: “Personally I believe this question needs a better answer than has been given publicly so far”.

An OpenAccess article in Cell Press for researchers that are considering to switch their research from X to Mastodon, by Robert W. Gehl and Roel Roscam Abbing. It describes key differences between the fediverse and X, and how Mastodon is quite different from X and Twitter from the perspective of researchers. It focuses on the expectations of privacy that people in the fediverse have, and one of the main recommendations for researchers is to shift from studying individuals to studying instances.

ActivityPods, the project to combine ActivityPub with the Solid protocol to create data ‘pods’, has been updated to version 1.5. With the new version it becomes easier to invite new people to your network, as well as better organisation of your contacts. ActivityPods tries to solve the problem that currently in the fediverse, you need to have a separate account for every fediverse service. With ActivityPods, applications can connect to your own Pod, so that your data and connections all live in one place.

The new link aggregator PieFed ‘emphasise trust, safety and happiness‘, and as part of that they have added extra notifications for commenting on posts made on servers with higher standards of moderation, such as Beehaw.org.

Fediseer, the project that provides a public space to crowd-source approval and disapproval of instances, has added a ‘rebuttals’ feature. Creator db0 noticed that instances were issuing ‘counter-censures’ (a censure is a negative judgement from one instance to another for any reason) just to reply to the original censure. Rebuttals provide an outlet for instances to explain their perspective or reasoning.

Bridgy Fed, the bridging project to connect the indieweb, fediverse (and Bluesky and Nostr in the near future) has expanded support for non-indie websites as well. Similar to RSS-Parrot, you can now follow websites and their RSS-feeds directly in your fediverse account.

The links

  • Pixelfed is building their spam filtering feature into a dedicated service, and working on adding parental controls.
  • PeerTube is building a mobile app, and is looking for people to help better understand their needs.
  • The research project by Erin Kissane and Darius Kazemi has kicked off as The Federalist Papers.
  • Designing a fediverse application with Bovine.
  • Updating your Mastodon status from a Kindle.
  • Mastodon client Oliphaunt for MacOS launches in beta.
  • radio free fedi is at a crossroads.
  • Short update by Write.as, saying they are working on post imports from WordPress and Substack.
  • The new Firefish fork Catodon moves towards the other Firefish fork, Iceshrimp. It’ll stay a separate project however.
  • A deeper look at one of the stand-out features of Misskey and it’s forks: Pages.

If you want to receive this weekly update directly in your inbox, subscribe below!

You can also follow this blog directly on the fediverse:

https://fediversereport.com/last-week-in-fediverse-ep-51/

Fitik,

@LaurensHof Thanks for blog, was very interesting to read! I am always excited for new news, and your collection seems great!

wikipedia, to random
@wikipedia@wikis.world avatar

It's Wikipedia's birthday! Here's our baby picture from January 15, 2001

Fitik,

@wikipedia Happy birthday, wikipedia!

kyonshi, to kbin
@kyonshi@dice.camp avatar

hmm, did just fall asleep? I haven't really heard anything about that project for a while

Fitik,

@kyonshi You can check out devlog at https://kbin.social/m/kbinDevlog to see new updates at kbin

There's also , fork, you can check it out too

mike, to random
@mike@flipboard.com avatar
Fitik,

@mike I can read and interact with this post from kbin fork, it's still astonishing to see how different social media can interact with each other without a problem.

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