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Inkwell - a multi-tenant long-form writing platform for the fediverse (open source, FEP-b2b8)

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  • I apologize for responding with AI, I didn't realize people would think I'm a bot or think I'm hiding. This is a giant learning lesson for me and I'm listenig to you all. My name is Stanton, I live in Westfield, IN, and I've tried building many things that have never had any luck. I respect that I upset people by my approach and regardless what anyone thinks, that matters to me. I did change my username on here because I understand now that I need to show who I am in the community. Honestly forums are even new for me. So I won't keep pushing back or challenging. I understand I was wrong and appreciate the feedback even if it's hard to hear.

  • From 'his' github profile pic:

    image

    sigh

    This is genuinely getting funny now. AI doesn't do a good job of knowing what's real or fake, any better than humans. I can show you that picture on my camera roll. My full name is Stanton Melvin. I'm not a bot, chill. I use AI, but it doesn't mean I'm not a real person with real ideas and goals.

  • I apologize for responding with AI, I didn't realize people would think I'm a bot or think I'm hiding. This is a giant learning lesson for me and I'm listenig to you all. My name is Stanton, I live in Westfield, IN, and I've tried building many things that have never had any luck. I respect that I upset people by my approach and regardless what anyone thinks, that matters to me. I did change my username on here because I understand now that I need to show who I am in the community. Honestly forums are even new for me. So I won't keep pushing back or challenging. I understand I was wrong and appreciate the feedback even if it's hard to hear.

    Thanks @inkwell@piefed.social, I appreciate the openness you've shown.

    I'm sorry I got defensive. It is important to me that the colleagues I hope to work with are on the same page when it comes to standing behind their work.

    It's truly surprising how much Inkwell can (supposedly) do at launch, and so I really hope you're able to find traction.

    Can you (as yourself!) share more about why you decided to pursue a long-form content writing app communicating over ActivityPub? For reference, write.as has a free plan, so there already is a player in the space providing this kind of experience.

    Not saying there only can be one, the more the merrier.

  • Hey Julian! No worries at all. I made an obvious mistake and I'm not afraid to admit that and learn better. I've done a lot of refection and do realized I have moved very fast. I originally started with a much smaller set of features but I posted on Reddit requesting feedback and people wanted writing features I wasn't expecting. I ended up shaping it by what people told me they wanted.

    I've always wanted to build apps or work in development. The last three years I've been working in product adjacent roles and I recently moved into my first product management role. However, I want to break free of working for others so I've been starting ideas and dropping them before they got anywhere for as long as I can remember. I wanted to build my own thing and I was trying to figure out what I could do on my own with AI being where it is now. I grew up in the mid 2000s so I naturally spent way too much time on Myspace and Livejournal. I missed the feel and community of the early internet. So I started brainstorming a journaling app and how to differentiate it (I used AI to help). I had also joked about starting my own social media app because I hated when I posted stuff on FB etc the algorithms punishes me and no one sees it. So AI (Claude) actually pointed out the fediverse to me. That is why I was able to say stupid stuff like Article objects would show on Mastodon with preview notes (I hadn't realized Mastodon hadn't implemented changes on their side.) I found out about FEP-b2b8 through a Mastodon subreddit when I posted asking for feedback. I was moving too fast to fully understand the fediverse and the new parts of this. And it was painfully obvious to everyone but me haha.

  • Hey Julian! No worries at all. I made an obvious mistake and I'm not afraid to admit that and learn better. I've done a lot of refection and do realized I have moved very fast. I originally started with a much smaller set of features but I posted on Reddit requesting feedback and people wanted writing features I wasn't expecting. I ended up shaping it by what people told me they wanted.

    I've always wanted to build apps or work in development. The last three years I've been working in product adjacent roles and I recently moved into my first product management role. However, I want to break free of working for others so I've been starting ideas and dropping them before they got anywhere for as long as I can remember. I wanted to build my own thing and I was trying to figure out what I could do on my own with AI being where it is now. I grew up in the mid 2000s so I naturally spent way too much time on Myspace and Livejournal. I missed the feel and community of the early internet. So I started brainstorming a journaling app and how to differentiate it (I used AI to help). I had also joked about starting my own social media app because I hated when I posted stuff on FB etc the algorithms punishes me and no one sees it. So AI (Claude) actually pointed out the fediverse to me. That is why I was able to say stupid stuff like Article objects would show on Mastodon with preview notes (I hadn't realized Mastodon hadn't implemented changes on their side.) I found out about FEP-b2b8 through a Mastodon subreddit when I posted asking for feedback. I was moving too fast to fully understand the fediverse and the new parts of this. And it was painfully obvious to everyone but me haha.

    Well, the good news is that you don't have to face it all alone.

    The AP developer community is here and happy to explain the difference between the theory (the spec, the protocol, the FEPs), and the reality (for most FEPs implementation is limited in scope).

    b2b8, for example, was championed by @evan, and I pushed for broader support alongside Ghost, WordPress, and WriteFreely. It is largely well supported except for the preview piece, which only BridgyFed supports.

    Claude will tell you lots of right things, and I'm sure it'll confidently tell you some wrong things too. If you ever need to double check something, ask on the fediverse subreddits or @technical-discussion — you should be able to reach it from your Piefed account.

  • Thanks again, Julian! I will absolutely follow the suggestion on asking for advice. I've received great feedback when posting about the app and will hopefully go about it better moving forward. xD

  • I apologize for responding with AI, I didn't realize people would think I'm a bot or think I'm hiding. This is a giant learning lesson for me and I'm listenig to you all. My name is Stanton, I live in Westfield, IN, and I've tried building many things that have never had any luck. I respect that I upset people by my approach and regardless what anyone thinks, that matters to me. I did change my username on here because I understand now that I need to show who I am in the community. Honestly forums are even new for me. So I won't keep pushing back or challenging. I understand I was wrong and appreciate the feedback even if it's hard to hear.

    I respect how you have taken this. Onwards and upwards!

  • I respect how you have taken this. Onwards and upwards!

    I'm the outsider who overstepped and needed to learn a lesson. Thanks for hanging in there and getting me on the right track!

  • Fair points to address, and I appreciate the directness.

    On AI: yes, I use Claude Code as a development tool and I'm transparent about it. There's a CLAUDE.md in the repo that says so explicitly. I'm doing this solo with a day job and a passion for building, and AI tooling lets me ship faster than I could alone. I get the skepticism given the slop AI is generating. I think the distinction that matters is whether someone is engaged, iterating on real feedback, and building something they actually use and maintain. I'm trying to be that.

    On FEP-b2b8: my wording was unclear, and I can see how it read that way. Inkwell publishes Article objects per FEP-b2b8 and also sends a preview Note so the content renders cleanly in Mastodon and other microblogging clients that don't handle Article objects. Saiwal read it right. I should have separated those two ideas more clearly in the post. That's on me.

    On the timeline: three weeks of full-time-equivalent effort from a solo dev using modern tooling. The code's all on GitHub if anyone wants to look at it, break it, or tell me what's wrong with it. Happy to take feedback on the implementation.
    I'm not trying to sell anything here. I had an idea, I'm over big tech and social media, and I'm learning and trying to be part of the fediverse community. The platform is free to use and open source. If it's not useful to this community, that's fine. But I'd rather get roasted on specifics than dismissed as another bot project.

    @inkwell@piefed.social Hey, I'm really sorry for all this dogpile. You shouldn't be getting this kind of flack when you took the time to implement ActivityPub.

    Thanks for your work. I'm trying it out as @evan@inkwell.social and I have to say it's a really lovely UI. I'll give any feedback I can on the ActivityPub implementation.

  • @julian It's been a great multi-implementer effort, both from the long-form text producers and the microblogging services.

    @inkwell@piefed.social one warning about doing ActivityPub development with LLMs: codeberg.org blocks a lot of LLMs for training and for RAG/MCP. Since FEPs are hosted there, I've found that searching for information on FEPs will result in incorrect information.

  • @inkwell@piefed.social Hey, I'm really sorry for all this dogpile. You shouldn't be getting this kind of flack when you took the time to implement ActivityPub.

    Thanks for your work. I'm trying it out as @evan@inkwell.social and I have to say it's a really lovely UI. I'll give any feedback I can on the ActivityPub implementation.

    Thanks, Evan! I honestly didn't take it personally and there were some learning I needed that will just help me be a better fediverse community member. And thanks for the kind words and feedback! That's mostly why I'm reaching out. The AP integration seems to be working okay, but I'm sure there are gaps I'm missing from a lack of knowledge.

  • @julian It's been a great multi-implementer effort, both from the long-form text producers and the microblogging services.

    @inkwell@piefed.social one warning about doing ActivityPub development with LLMs: codeberg.org blocks a lot of LLMs for training and for RAG/MCP. Since FEPs are hosted there, I've found that searching for information on FEPs will result in incorrect information.

    Thanks again Evan! I think that is where my bad information came from and good to note. I've been lucky and really appreciate the support. If there is anything I can do to improve on my side, I'm all ears!

  • Appreciate that! I realized I had an outdated readme and needed to add the sourcing directly from the Inkwell site. My biggest concern is gaps that AI won't catch, but luckily I've had early adopters getting on, requesting feature upgrades and reporting bugs. There is no way it would be where it is at if I didn't get lucky with some early users and feedback.

  • @inkwell@piefed.social Hey, I'm really sorry for all this dogpile. You shouldn't be getting this kind of flack when you took the time to implement ActivityPub.

    Thanks for your work. I'm trying it out as @evan@inkwell.social and I have to say it's a really lovely UI. I'll give any feedback I can on the ActivityPub implementation.

    @evan@activitypub.space

    I’m really sorry for all this dogpile. You shouldn’t be getting this kind of flack when you took the time to implement ActivityPub

    You took the words right out of my mouth. I have no bones about dismissing #MOLE Training as a technology for most purposes; https://disintermedia.net.nz/invasion-of-the-mole-trainers/

    I might argue the toss with someone using a Trained MOLE, outside of the narrow range of applications it's suitable for (eg digging holes in data). In fact, it's pretty damn likely. But I don't bully hobby developers for making technical choices I disagree with. Some of the comments I've seen directed at Stanton here are worse than the Mastodon HOA. Which is usually at least about some kind of substantive issue with the project (eg not respecting posting scopes when displaying replies), even if the overreaction is nuclear scale.

    @rimu@piefed.social @julian@activitypub.space If you really believe you're talking to a Trained #MOLE, do you expect it to take offence and withdraw its participation if you're sufficiently mean to it? Why would it do that? If you are talking to a chatbot, you're just hurling all this toxic negativity into the fediverse for no reason. It's a special case of flooding the zone with shit.

    But take a breath, touch some grass, and consider this; what if you're wrong? Which is a possibility a rational person must always stay open to. Have you considered how you would feel if somebody judged your AP implementations and your fediverse replies to be the work of a MOLE, and treated you this way? What if this is an unusually prompt and calm person (maybe they meditate regularly or something)? Or they have a disability and they're using a MOLE to help them reply promptly, but there is a thinking, feeling human being reading these replies. Honestly guys, pull your woolly head in.

    Sorry to be so blunt, but I absolutely cannot abide bullying, of any kind, for any reason.

  • From 'his' github profile pic:

    image

    sigh

    @rimu@piefed.social

    From ‘his’ github profile pic

    Do you know how zerogpt.com detects a Trained #MOLE? By using a Trained MOLE!

    we employ a comprehensive deep learning methodology, trained on extensive text collections from the internet, educational datasets, and our proprietary synthetic AI datasets produced using various language models

    Which means that like all the output a Trained MOLE vomits up, there's absolutely no way to know how accurate this is (whatever the truth of whether there's a human behind these texts of not). Maybe this is a real photo of Stanton. Maybe it's been heavily altered by automated filters in GIMP. Maybe it's been auto-generated, because like many of us, Stanton likes his privacy and doesn't want to doxx himself (a privilege reversed for middle class people in the middle of the social diversity bell curve). The Trained MOLE you just weaponized against him doesn't know, and neither do you.

    You know who now deserves exactly the same dogpile from you that Stanton got for using a Trained MOLE to prove a concept? I'll give you 3 guesses ; )

  • @rimu@piefed.social

    From ‘his’ github profile pic

    Do you know how zerogpt.com detects a Trained #MOLE? By using a Trained MOLE!

    we employ a comprehensive deep learning methodology, trained on extensive text collections from the internet, educational datasets, and our proprietary synthetic AI datasets produced using various language models

    Which means that like all the output a Trained MOLE vomits up, there's absolutely no way to know how accurate this is (whatever the truth of whether there's a human behind these texts of not). Maybe this is a real photo of Stanton. Maybe it's been heavily altered by automated filters in GIMP. Maybe it's been auto-generated, because like many of us, Stanton likes his privacy and doesn't want to doxx himself (a privilege reversed for middle class people in the middle of the social diversity bell curve). The Trained MOLE you just weaponized against him doesn't know, and neither do you.

    You know who now deserves exactly the same dogpile from you that Stanton got for using a Trained MOLE to prove a concept? I'll give you 3 guesses ; )

    @rimu@piefed.social
    At least the Inkwell software consistently fulfills the promises its interface makes. I've tried to edit both my posts in this topic with PieFed, this one to clarify that I meant; detects a Trained MOLE *output. The interface reloaded with a slightly different version of the OP and the comment I was replying to, no sign of the comment that I wanted to edit nor an edit box.

    Can I respectfully suggest you redirect the time and energy you're putting into dogpiling other AP implementors into fixing some bugs, and testing your interface in non-Chromium-based browsers on non-grApple OS (I'm using LibreWolf)?

  • @evan@activitypub.space

    I’m really sorry for all this dogpile. You shouldn’t be getting this kind of flack when you took the time to implement ActivityPub

    You took the words right out of my mouth. I have no bones about dismissing #MOLE Training as a technology for most purposes; https://disintermedia.net.nz/invasion-of-the-mole-trainers/

    I might argue the toss with someone using a Trained MOLE, outside of the narrow range of applications it's suitable for (eg digging holes in data). In fact, it's pretty damn likely. But I don't bully hobby developers for making technical choices I disagree with. Some of the comments I've seen directed at Stanton here are worse than the Mastodon HOA. Which is usually at least about some kind of substantive issue with the project (eg not respecting posting scopes when displaying replies), even if the overreaction is nuclear scale.

    @rimu@piefed.social @julian@activitypub.space If you really believe you're talking to a Trained #MOLE, do you expect it to take offence and withdraw its participation if you're sufficiently mean to it? Why would it do that? If you are talking to a chatbot, you're just hurling all this toxic negativity into the fediverse for no reason. It's a special case of flooding the zone with shit.

    But take a breath, touch some grass, and consider this; what if you're wrong? Which is a possibility a rational person must always stay open to. Have you considered how you would feel if somebody judged your AP implementations and your fediverse replies to be the work of a MOLE, and treated you this way? What if this is an unusually prompt and calm person (maybe they meditate regularly or something)? Or they have a disability and they're using a MOLE to help them reply promptly, but there is a thinking, feeling human being reading these replies. Honestly guys, pull your woolly head in.

    Sorry to be so blunt, but I absolutely cannot abide bullying, of any kind, for any reason.

    > Sorry to be so blunt, but I absolutely cannot abide bullying, of any kind, for any reason.

    Once Stanton revealed his identity and stood behind his work both @rimu@piefed.social and I apologized and offered our help. That's all we're asking for, and it's not a lot to expect someone to stand behind their product.

    Generative AI brings out the laziest behaviour in some people. They don't even read responses they just paste it in to the LLM and copy-paste the output. The mismatch in work is not something I abide by.

    Some coward last month had their OpenClaw agent with a god complex let loose on another OSS project and when the bot got rebuffed, it wrote a hit piece on the maintainer. The bot owner was (by their own admission) hands off on the whole matter.

    So, no, I am not at all going to be patient and accepting when a supposedly fully-formed piece of software is launched with zero prior reputation, no attribution, and shows telltale signs of AI usage. It trips all kinds of flags, and I will be wary of it.

    > Mastodon HOA

    Respectfully, this comes nowhere near the shit I've seen from that group.


Gli ultimi otto messaggi ricevuti dalla Federazione
  • > Sorry to be so blunt, but I absolutely cannot abide bullying, of any kind, for any reason.

    Once Stanton revealed his identity and stood behind his work both @rimu@piefed.social and I apologized and offered our help. That's all we're asking for, and it's not a lot to expect someone to stand behind their product.

    Generative AI brings out the laziest behaviour in some people. They don't even read responses they just paste it in to the LLM and copy-paste the output. The mismatch in work is not something I abide by.

    Some coward last month had their OpenClaw agent with a god complex let loose on another OSS project and when the bot got rebuffed, it wrote a hit piece on the maintainer. The bot owner was (by their own admission) hands off on the whole matter.

    So, no, I am not at all going to be patient and accepting when a supposedly fully-formed piece of software is launched with zero prior reputation, no attribution, and shows telltale signs of AI usage. It trips all kinds of flags, and I will be wary of it.

    > Mastodon HOA

    Respectfully, this comes nowhere near the shit I've seen from that group.

    read more

  • @rimu@piefed.social
    At least the Inkwell software consistently fulfills the promises its interface makes. I've tried to edit both my posts in this topic with PieFed, this one to clarify that I meant; detects a Trained MOLE *output. The interface reloaded with a slightly different version of the OP and the comment I was replying to, no sign of the comment that I wanted to edit nor an edit box.

    Can I respectfully suggest you redirect the time and energy you're putting into dogpiling other AP implementors into fixing some bugs, and testing your interface in non-Chromium-based browsers on non-grApple OS (I'm using LibreWolf)?

    read more

  • @rimu@piefed.social

    From ‘his’ github profile pic

    Do you know how zerogpt.com detects a Trained #MOLE? By using a Trained MOLE!

    we employ a comprehensive deep learning methodology, trained on extensive text collections from the internet, educational datasets, and our proprietary synthetic AI datasets produced using various language models

    Which means that like all the output a Trained MOLE vomits up, there's absolutely no way to know how accurate this is (whatever the truth of whether there's a human behind these texts of not). Maybe this is a real photo of Stanton. Maybe it's been heavily altered by automated filters in GIMP. Maybe it's been auto-generated, because like many of us, Stanton likes his privacy and doesn't want to doxx himself (a privilege reversed for middle class people in the middle of the social diversity bell curve). The Trained MOLE you just weaponized against him doesn't know, and neither do you.

    You know who now deserves exactly the same dogpile from you that Stanton got for using a Trained MOLE to prove a concept? I'll give you 3 guesses ; )

    read more

  • @evan@activitypub.space

    I’m really sorry for all this dogpile. You shouldn’t be getting this kind of flack when you took the time to implement ActivityPub

    You took the words right out of my mouth. I have no bones about dismissing #MOLE Training as a technology for most purposes; https://disintermedia.net.nz/invasion-of-the-mole-trainers/

    I might argue the toss with someone using a Trained MOLE, outside of the narrow range of applications it's suitable for (eg digging holes in data). In fact, it's pretty damn likely. But I don't bully hobby developers for making technical choices I disagree with. Some of the comments I've seen directed at Stanton here are worse than the Mastodon HOA. Which is usually at least about some kind of substantive issue with the project (eg not respecting posting scopes when displaying replies), even if the overreaction is nuclear scale.

    @rimu@piefed.social @julian@activitypub.space If you really believe you're talking to a Trained #MOLE, do you expect it to take offence and withdraw its participation if you're sufficiently mean to it? Why would it do that? If you are talking to a chatbot, you're just hurling all this toxic negativity into the fediverse for no reason. It's a special case of flooding the zone with shit.

    But take a breath, touch some grass, and consider this; what if you're wrong? Which is a possibility a rational person must always stay open to. Have you considered how you would feel if somebody judged your AP implementations and your fediverse replies to be the work of a MOLE, and treated you this way? What if this is an unusually prompt and calm person (maybe they meditate regularly or something)? Or they have a disability and they're using a MOLE to help them reply promptly, but there is a thinking, feeling human being reading these replies. Honestly guys, pull your woolly head in.

    Sorry to be so blunt, but I absolutely cannot abide bullying, of any kind, for any reason.

    read more

  • Appreciate that! I realized I had an outdated readme and needed to add the sourcing directly from the Inkwell site. My biggest concern is gaps that AI won't catch, but luckily I've had early adopters getting on, requesting feature upgrades and reporting bugs. There is no way it would be where it is at if I didn't get lucky with some early users and feedback.

    read more

  • Thanks again Evan! I think that is where my bad information came from and good to note. I've been lucky and really appreciate the support. If there is anything I can do to improve on my side, I'm all ears!

    read more

  • Thanks, Evan! I honestly didn't take it personally and there were some learning I needed that will just help me be a better fediverse community member. And thanks for the kind words and feedback! That's mostly why I'm reaching out. The AP integration seems to be working okay, but I'm sure there are gaps I'm missing from a lack of knowledge.

    read more

  • @julian It's been a great multi-implementer effort, both from the long-form text producers and the microblogging services.

    @inkwell@piefed.social one warning about doing ActivityPub development with LLMs: codeberg.org blocks a lot of LLMs for training and for RAG/MCP. Since FEPs are hosted there, I've found that searching for information on FEPs will result in incorrect information.

    read more
Post suggeriti
  • #fediverse #fedimtl

    Fediverso fediverse fedimtl
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    @Recalcitrant I mean, it's more of a confederacy than a federal system, anyway, but thankfully we didn't call it the confediverse when it started
  • 0 Votes
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    I had the opportunity to attend FOSDEM 2026 virtually, and I spent almost all of my time in the [Social Web](https://fosdem.org/2026/schedule/track/social-web/) track. A few themes kept coming up across talks. Some were explicit, some were between the lines. Either way, they prompted a bunch of thoughts I wanted to capture. DISCLAIMER: AI was used to help me organize and improve the flow of this post. Ideas and thoughts expressed are my own. ## Hosting is hard In [*Building a sustainable Italian Fediverse: overcoming technical, adoption and moderation challenges*](https://fosdem.org/2026/schedule/event/VKHGXT-building_a_sustainable_italian_fediverse_overcoming_technical_adoption_and_moder/), there was a moment (not the main focus of the talk) where hosting came up in a way that really stuck with me. I’m paraphrasing, so apologies if I misrepresent anything, but the gist was: - Hosting Mastodon is hard, so we simplify with hosting services like Masto.Host - Hosting PixelFed and PeerTube is easier thanks to appliances like YunoHost Based on my own experience, that rings true, with some nuance. Getting Mastodon running isn’t actually the hardest part. The self-hosting docs are good enough in my opinion, and that’s how I originally stood up my instance at [toot.lqdev.tech](https://toot.lqdev.tech/@lqdev). I even maintain guides for [cleanup](https://lqdev.me/resources/wiki/mastodon-server-cleanup/) and [upgrades](/resources/wiki/mastodon-server-upgrades/) that largely mirror the official Mastodon documentation and release notes. The harder part is everything after provisioning. Mastodon (especially with federation enabled) can be resource-intensive, and that cost shows up fast even on a single-user instance. If I’m not staying on top of maintenance, disk fills up. Every few weeks, my instance will go down because I’ve run out of storage. Add database migrations, which can be error-prone, and you end up with a setup that’s straightforward to launch but expensive to operate. You pay in money for a big enough server, and you pay in time for ongoing maintenace. I still want to participate in the Fediverse, but I don’t want to keep paying the maintenance tax for Mastodon. That’s one of the reasons [I implemented ActivityPub on my static site](/notes/website-now-natively-posts-to-the-fediverse-2026-01-22/) instead. On the PixelFed side, I did try to self-host it once, and I couldn’t get it working cleanly from scratch. Some of that is on me (I’m not familiar with PHP), but either way, YunoHost was a lifesaver. With YunoHost, I had PixelFed up and running quickly, and what that ecosystem provides is genuinely impressive. That said, I also learned the “operations” lesson there too. During an upgrade, something went wrong with the database, it got corrupted, and I couldn’t restore from backup. I ultimately took the instance down. I’m willing to attribute that to user error, but it still reinforces the bigger point. The promise of federation and decentralization is that you can stand up your own node for yourself, your family, a school, a company, a city, even a government. In practice, that’s still too hard for most people unless they use appliances like YunoHost or managed hosting like Masto.Host. And yes, those options mean giving up some control. But even with that tradeoff, I’d argue it’s still better than centralized platforms. As someone fairly technical and a little extreme about owning the whole stack (I implemented my own static site generator, Webmentions service, and now ActivityPub), I still find this hard. I can’t imagine how unapproachable it feels if you’re not technical. I just wish it were simpler and more cost-effective to run these services without needing either deep system administration knowledge or active ongoing maintenance. ## One identity, many post types In the talk, [*How to level up the Fediverse*](https://fosdem.org/2026/schedule/event/HVJRNV-how_to_level_up_the_fediverse/), Christine and Jessica talked about ActivityPub implementations and touched on something that really resonated with me. The idea (again, paraphrasing) was that splitting content types by app (video goes to PeerTube, images go to PixelFed, microblogging goes to Mastodon) might not be the right long-term model. Instead, they suggested something closer to one place to publish and follow people, with rich post types handled in one identity and one experience. That immediately made me think about Tumblr. When I first heard [Tumblr was planning to implement ActivityPub](https://techcrunch.com/2022/11/21/tumblr-to-add-support-for-activitypub-the-social-protocol-powering-mastodon-and-other-apps/), I was excited because Tumblr is already “that kind of app.” You can publish videos, photos, polls, longer posts, and everything in between, all in one place. There was also talk about [moving Tumblr to WordPress](https://techcrunch.com/2024/08/28/tumblr-to-move-its-half-a-billion-blogs-to-wordpress/), which (in theory) could make ActivityPub integration even more powerful. But as of now, [Tumblr’s ActivityPub work seems to be paused](https://techcrunch.com/2025/07/01/automattic-puts-tumblr-migration-to-wordpress-on-hold/). The more I think about it, the more this model makes sense, especially because the most important part isn’t the “single app.” It’s the single identity. You should have one account where your content originates. Then people can consume it from different experiences. Maybe that is a video-focused client, maybe it is an image-first view, maybe it is a Mastodon-like timeline. The key is that you do not need separate accounts everywhere. That’s essentially how I think about my website. My site is my digital home and my identity. I post different content types which align with [IndieWeb post types](https://indieweb.org/posts#Types_of_Posts): - Articles - Notes - Responses (reposts, replies, likes) - Bookmarks - Media (photos and videos) - RSVPs People can follow via RSS. And more recently, I implemented my own ActivityPub support so my posts generate native ActivityPub activities. That means Mastodon and other clients can follow and interact with my site directly. What I like about this is that it decouples publishing from consumption. I choose where I publish (my site). Others choose how they consume (their client). The protocols handle the translation. ## The web is already social and decentralized In Social Web conversations, sometimes the tone implies the "social web" is separate from "the web". I don't really buy that. The web is social because people are on it. People use it to learn, create, find community, do commerce, argue, collaborate, share memes, and everything else. The web is also decentralized by default. That's the baseline architecture. Dave Winer recently wrote about software being ["of the web"](http://scripting.com/2025/11/24/141418.html). Software that's built to share data, accept input, produce output, and let users move their data. Not locked into silos. This is why I'm so bullish on a different architectural approach: **start as a website, add social capabilities as components.** People are already using WordPress, Ghost, and Micro.blog to build sites. With an ActivityPub plugin, your existing web presence becomes followable and interactive in the Fediverse. The site remains a site. It just gets socially interoperable. Bridgy Fed reinforces this. It takes what already exists on the web and helps it participate in social protocols, without forcing you to rebuild as a native social app first. That's also my own setup. My website worked as a publishing platform and people could follow via RSS. When I implemented ActivityPub, it became progressively enhanced. Same posts, new social vocabulary. I didn't have to abandon my site. I just made it speak the social language. ## Modular and extensible feels like the right direction This is the architectural vision I took away from Bonfire: [Building Modular, Consentful, and Federated Social Networks](https://fosdem.org/2026/schedule/event/3QHALR-bonfire_building_modular_consentful_and_federated_social_networks/). The "opt-in pieces" approach is about choosing which parts you want, evolving your experience based on what you enable. It echoes [small pieces loosely joined](http://scripting.com/2026/01/30/140150.html). It's a practical model for a federated future: - Start with the basic web - Add social capabilities as components - Get progressively more powerful as you opt in Your site still works normally. When you speak the lingua franca of protocols like ActivityPub, you can express social intent in a way other systems understand. So it's not "the web vs the social web." It's the web, with richer native social vocabulary. ## Conclusion This probably reads like I’m nitpicking, but I’m genuinely bullish on federated and decentralized networks. That’s why I’m still participating. What stood out to me at FOSDEM this year is momentum. Last year, the Social Web track was a half day. This year, it expanded to a full day. That signals to me that there are a lot of smart, passionate people working across protocol design, UX, moderation, policy, community, activism, and implementation, trying to build real alternatives to entrenched silos. And the plurality of implementations is a strength. It encourages exploration, competition, and innovation. My hope is that the “end state” isn’t a separate social web you have to join. It’s a web that continues to work as expected, but gets progressively enhanced when you opt into interoperable social protocols. Ultimately, there isn’t “the web” and “the social web.” There's just the web, and social vocabularies that participants can adopt without thinking about it.
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    rimu@piefed.social when the question is federated outward, is it of type of question? 😛 kariboka@mastodon.social
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    https://www.thehierophant.world/blog/giving-a-voice/Added a text-to-speech pipeline to the Chronicle so posts can be listened to; the first version uses a stock voice with hashes + blobs, with plans for a custom vocal model and space for manual recordings when stories deserve it.#writing #worldbuilding #hierophant