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Social Forum federato con il resto del mondo. Non contano le istanze, contano le persone
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    @activitypub.blog this is the best pluginokay maybe after askimet but OTHER THAN THAT xD
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    Running a community in the Fediverse means balancing openness with safety. Every year, @iftas takes the pulse of administrators, moderators, and community managers with their Annual Needs Assessment. This survey helps identify what’s working, where support is needed, and which tools can make a difference for those keeping decentralized spaces safe.The 2025 survey is now openTake part in the IFTAS Needs Assessment (5–10 minutes).Take the survey now(If you haven’t seen them before, you can also take a look at last year’s report)Last year’s responses represented moderators of over 4.3 million accounts across ActivityPub platforms. With WordPress now the largest group of federating instances, it’s especially important for our community of hosts, site admins, and moderators to be heard.Moderation in WordPress: From Site-Wide to Personal ControlsWe recently introduced a major update to the ActivityPub plugin for WordPress: personalized and site-wide moderation tools.Site administrators can now set domain, keyword, and actor-level blocks that protect the entire site.Individual users can fine-tune their own experience with personal blocks, managed directly from their profiles.Content is checked against both global and personal rules—so moderation works at every level.These improvements directly address needs raised in previous IFTAS surveys, making moderation more discoverable, flexible, and effective for WordPress communities in the Fediverse.Your Input MattersIFTAS uses the Needs Assessment to guide tools, policies, and advocacy that reflect the real-world challenges of moderators—especially those in under-resourced communities. The more representative the responses, the stronger the outcomes for everyone.If you’re running a federating WordPress site, please consider:Filling out the survey yourself.Sharing it with other admins, moderators, and community organizers.Reminding folks that it’s anonymous, quick, and impactful.Take the 2025 Fediverse Needs AssessmentTogether, we can keep building a safer, healthier Fediverse—one that reflects the needs of its communities.
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    lambic@social.linux.pizza yes, following a Peertube account from Mastodon should allow you to view their videos as soon as they're posted. You should be able to play them from within your timeline too.
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    This tutorial will guide you through building a simple ActivityPub bot using Python. The bot will listen for mentions and, when it receives a message in a specific format, it will schedule and send a reminder back to the user after a specified delay. For example, if a user mentions the bot with a message like "@reminder@your.host.com 10m check the oven", the bot will reply 10 minutes later with a message like "🔔 Reminder for @user: check the oven". Prerequisites To follow this tutorial, you will need Python 3.10+ and the following libraries: apkit[server]: A powerful toolkit for building ActivityPub applications in Python. We use the server extra, which includes FastAPI-based components. uvicorn: An ASGI server to run our FastAPI application. cryptography: Used for generating and managing the cryptographic keys required for ActivityPub. uv: An optional but recommended fast package manager. You can install these dependencies using uv or pip. # Initialize a new project with uv uv init # Install dependencies uv add "apkit[server]" uvicorn cryptography Project Structure The project structure is minimal, consisting of a single Python file for our bot's logic. . ├── main.py └── private_key.pem main.py: Contains all the code for the bot. private_key.pem: The private key for the bot's Actor. This will be generated automatically on the first run. Code Walkthrough Our application logic can be broken down into the following steps: Imports and Configuration: Set up necessary imports and basic configuration variables. Key Generation: Prepare the cryptographic keys needed for signing activities. Actor Definition: Define the bot's identity on the Fediverse. Server Initialization: Set up the apkit ActivityPub server. Data Storage: Implement a simple in-memory store for created activities. Reminder Logic: Code the core logic for parsing reminders and sending notifications. Endpoint Definitions: Create the necessary web endpoints (/actor, /inbox, etc.). Activity Handlers: Process incoming activities from other servers. Application Startup: Run the server. Let's dive into each section of the main.py file. 1. Imports and Configuration First, we import the necessary modules and define the basic configuration for our bot. # main.py import asyncio import logging import re import uuid import os from datetime import timedelta, datetime # Imports from FastAPI, cryptography, and apkit from fastapi import Request, Response from fastapi.responses import JSONResponse from cryptography.hazmat.primitives.asymmetric import rsa from cryptography.hazmat.primitives import serialization as crypto_serialization from apkit.config import AppConfig from apkit.server import ActivityPubServer from apkit.server.types import Context, ActorKey from apkit.server.responses import ActivityResponse from apkit.models import ( Actor, Application, CryptographicKey, Follow, Create, Note, Mention, Actor as APKitActor, OrderedCollection, ) from apkit.client import WebfingerResource, WebfingerResult, WebfingerLink from apkit.client.asyncio.client import ActivityPubClient # --- Logging Setup --- logging.basicConfig(level=logging.INFO) logger = logging.getLogger(__name__) # --- Basic Configuration --- HOST = "your.host.com" # Replace with your domain USER_ID = "reminder" # The bot's username Make sure to replace your.host.com with the actual domain where your bot will be hosted. These values determine your bot's unique identifier (e.g., @reminder@your.host.com). 2. Key Generation and Persistence ActivityPub uses HTTP Signatures to secure communication between servers. This requires each actor to have a public/private key pair. The following code generates a private key and saves it to a file if one doesn't already exist. # main.py (continued) # --- Key Persistence --- KEY_FILE = "private_key.pem" # Load the private key if it exists, otherwise generate a new one if os.path.exists(KEY_FILE): logger.info(f"Loading existing private key from {KEY_FILE}.") with open(KEY_FILE, "rb") as f: private_key = crypto_serialization.load_pem_private_key(f.read(), password=None) else: logger.info(f"No key file found. Generating new private key and saving to {KEY_FILE}.") private_key = rsa.generate_private_key(public_exponent=65537, key_size=2048) with open(KEY_FILE, "wb") as f: f.write(private_key.private_bytes( encoding=crypto_serialization.Encoding.PEM, format=crypto_serialization.PrivateFormat.PKCS8, encryption_algorithm=crypto_serialization.NoEncryption() )) # Generate the public key from the private key public_key_pem = private_key.public_key().public_bytes( encoding=crypto_serialization.Encoding.PEM, format=crypto_serialization.PublicFormat.SubjectPublicKeyInfo ).decode('utf-8') 3. Actor Definition Next, we define the bot's Actor. The Actor is the bot's identity in the ActivityPub network. We use the Application type, as this entity is automated. # main.py (continued) # --- Actor Definition --- actor = Application( id=f"https://{HOST}/actor", name="Reminder Bot", preferredUsername=USER_ID, summary="A bot that sends you reminders. Mention me like: @reminder 5m Check the oven", inbox=f"https://{HOST}/inbox", # Endpoint for receiving activities outbox=f"https://{HOST}/outbox", # Endpoint for sending activities publicKey=CryptographicKey( id=f"https://{HOST}/actor#main-key", owner=f"https://{HOST}/actor", publicKeyPem=public_key_pem ) ) 4. Server Initialization We initialize the ActivityPubServer from apkit, providing it with a function to retrieve our Actor's keys for signing outgoing activities. # main.py (continued) # --- Key Retrieval Function --- async def get_keys_for_actor(identifier: str) -> list[ActorKey]: """Returns the key for a given Actor ID.""" if identifier == actor.id: return [ActorKey(key_id=actor.publicKey.id, private_key=private_key)] return [] # --- Server Initialization --- app = ActivityPubServer(apkit_config=AppConfig( actor_keys=get_keys_for_actor # Register the key retrieval function )) 5. In-Memory Storage and Cache To serve created activities, we need to store them somewhere. For simplicity, this example uses a basic in-memory dictionary as a store and a cache. In a production application, you would replace this with a persistent database (like SQLite or PostgreSQL) and a proper cache (like Redis). # main.py (continued) # --- In-memory Store and Cache --- ACTIVITY_STORE = {} # A simple dict to store created activities CACHE = {} # A cache for recently accessed activities CACHE_TTL = timedelta(minutes=5) # Cache expiration time (5 minutes) 6. Reminder Parsing and Sending Logic This is the core logic of our bot. The parse_reminder function uses a regular expression to extract the delay and message from a mention, and send_reminder schedules the notification. # main.py (continued) # --- Reminder Parsing Logic --- def parse_reminder(text: str) -> tuple[timedelta | None, str | None, str | None]: """Parses reminder text like '5m do something'.""" # ... (implementation omitted for brevity) # --- Reminder Sending Function --- async def send_reminder(ctx: Context, delay: timedelta, message: str, target_actor: APKitActor, original_note: Note): """Waits for a specified delay and then sends a reminder.""" logger.info(f"Scheduling reminder for {target_actor.id} in {delay}: '{message}'") await asyncio.sleep(delay.total_seconds()) # Asynchronously wait logger.info(f"Sending reminder to {target_actor.id}") # Create the reminder Note reminder_note = Note(...) # Wrap it in a Create activity reminder_create = Create(...) # Store the created activities ACTIVITY_STORE[reminder_note.id] = reminder_note ACTIVITY_STORE[reminder_create.id] = reminder_create # Send the activity to the target actor's inbox keys = await get_keys_for_actor(f"https://{HOST}/actor") await ctx.send(keys, target_actor, reminder_create) logger.info(f"Reminder sent to {target_actor.id}") 7. Endpoint Definitions We define the required ActivityPub endpoints. Since apkit is built on FastAPI, we can use standard FastAPI decorators. The main endpoints are: Webfinger: Allows users on other servers to discover the bot using an address like @user@host. This is a crucial first step for federation. /actor: Serves the bot's Actor object, which contains its profile information and public key. /inbox: The endpoint where the bot receives activities from other servers. apkit handles this route automatically, directing activities to the handlers we'll define in the next step. /outbox: A collection of the activities created by the bot. but this returns placeholder collection. /notes/{note_id} and /creates/{create_id}: Endpoints to serve specific objects created by the bot, allowing other servers to fetch them by their unique ID. Here is the code for defining these endpoints: # main.py (continued) # The inbox endpoint is handled by apkit automatically. app.inbox("/inbox") @app.webfinger() async def webfinger_endpoint(request: Request, acct: WebfingerResource) -> Response: """Handles Webfinger requests to make the bot discoverable.""" if not acct.url: # Handle resource queries like acct:user@host if acct.username == USER_ID and acct.host == HOST: link = WebfingerLink(rel="self", type="application/activity+json", href=actor.id) wf_result = WebfingerResult(subject=acct, links=[link]) return JSONResponse(wf_result.to_json(), media_type="application/jrd+json") else: # Handle resource queries using a URL if acct.url == f"https://{HOST}/actor": link = WebfingerLink(rel="self", type="application/activity+json", href=actor.id) wf_result = WebfingerResult(subject=acct, links=[link]) return JSONResponse(wf_result.to_json(), media_type="application/jrd+json") return JSONResponse({"message": "Not Found"}, status_code=404) @app.get("/actor") async def get_actor_endpoint(): """Serves the bot's Actor object.""" return ActivityResponse(actor) @app.get("/outbox") async def get_outbox_endpoint(): """Serves a collection of the bot's sent activities.""" items = sorted(ACTIVITY_STORE.values(), key=lambda x: x.id, reverse=True) outbox_collection = OrderedCollection( id=actor.outbox, totalItems=len(items), orderedItems=items ) return ActivityResponse(outbox_collection) @app.get("/notes/{note_id}") async def get_note_endpoint(note_id: uuid.UUID): """Serves a specific Note object, with caching.""" note_uri = f"https://{HOST}/notes/{note_id}" # Check cache first if note_uri in CACHE and (datetime.now() - CACHE[note_uri]["timestamp"]) < CACHE_TTL: return ActivityResponse(CACHE[note_uri]["activity"]) # If not in cache, get from store if note_uri in ACTIVITY_STORE: activity = ACTIVITY_STORE[note_uri] # Add to cache before returning CACHE[note_uri] = {"activity": activity, "timestamp": datetime.now()} return ActivityResponse(activity) return Response(status_code=404) # Not Found @app.get("/creates/{create_id}") async def get_create_endpoint(create_id: uuid.UUID): """Serves a specific Create activity, with caching.""" create_uri = f"https://{HOST}/creates/{create_id}" if create_uri in CACHE and (datetime.now() - CACHE[create_uri]["timestamp"]) < CACHE_TTL: return ActivityResponse(CACHE[create_uri]["activity"]) if create_uri in ACTIVITY_STORE: activity = ACTIVITY_STORE[create_uri] CACHE[create_uri] = {"activity": activity, "timestamp": datetime.now()} return ActivityResponse(activity) return Response(status_code=404) 8. Activity Handlers We use the @app.on() decorator to define handlers for specific activity types posted to our inbox. on_follow_activity: Automatically accepts Follow requests. on_create_activity: Parses incoming Create activities (specifically for Note objects) to schedule reminders. # main.py (continued) # Handler for Follow activities @app.on(Follow) async def on_follow_activity(ctx: Context): """Automatically accepts follow requests.""" # ... (implementation omitted for brevity) # Handler for Create activities @app.on(Create) async def on_create_activity(ctx: Context): """Parses mentions to schedule reminders.""" activity = ctx.activity # Ignore if it's not a Note if not (isinstance(activity, Create) and isinstance(activity.object, Note)): return Response(status_code=202) note = activity.object # Check if the bot was mentioned is_mentioned = any( isinstance(tag, Mention) and tag.href == actor.id for tag in (note.tag or []) ) if not is_mentioned: return Response(status_code=202) # ... (Parse reminder text) delay, message, time_str = parse_reminder(command_text) # If parsing is successful, schedule the reminder as a background task if delay and message and sender_actor: asyncio.create_task(send_reminder(ctx, delay, message, sender_actor, note)) reply_content = f"<p>✅ OK! I will remind you in {time_str}.</p>" else: # If parsing fails, send usage instructions reply_content = "<p>🤔 Sorry, I didn\'t understand. Please use the format: `@reminder [time] [message]`.</p><p>Example: `@reminder 10m Check the oven`</p>" # ... (Create and send the reply Note) 9. Running the Application Finally, we run the application using uvicorn. # main.py (continued) if __name__ == "__main__": import uvicorn logger.info("Starting uvicorn server...") uvicorn.run(app, host="0.0.0.0", port=8000) How to Run the Bot Set the HOST and USER_ID variables in main.py to match your environment. Run the server from your terminal: uvicorn main:app --host 0.0.0.0 --port 8000 Your bot will be running at http://0.0.0.0:8000. Now you can mention your bot from anywhere in the Fediverse (e.g., @reminder@your.host.com) to set a reminder. Next Steps This tutorial covers the basics of creating a simple ActivityPub bot. Since it only uses in-memory storage, all reminders will be lost on server restart. Here are some potential improvements: Persistent Storage: Replace the in-memory ACTIVITY_STORE with a database like SQLite or PostgreSQL. Robust Task Queuing: Use a dedicated task queue like Celery with a Redis or RabbitMQ broker to ensure reminders are not lost if the server restarts. Advanced Commands: Add support for more complex commands, such as recurring reminders. We hope this guide serves as a good starting point for building your own ActivityPub applications! https://fedi-libs.github.io/apkit/ https://github.com/fedi-libs/apkit https://github.com/AmaseCocoa/activitypub-reminder-bot
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    @julian@activitypub.space It seems that NodeBB doesn't support the Mastodon API for polls. Since ActivityPub doesn't seem to support Poll natively, there needs to be an ActivityPub standard for poll voting. Otherwise, I suggest adopting the Mastodon API to improve compatibility with posts containing polls.
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    Super stoked that Mastodon is rolling this out after many months of testing. That even a modicum of effort was put in to address the social failings of quote posting (as implemented on X/Twitter) is already a huge win for online public discourse.
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    @hongminhee It's a place where our loosey goosey style goes into nondeterminism. We should tighten it up in the next version. My main answer would be: publishers, don't do that.
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    This is what solidarity looks likehttps://thenexusofprivacy.net/what-solidarity-looks-like/(Part 2 of “Decentralization” and erasure: Blacksky, Bluesky, and the ATmosphere)@general @fediverse @fediversenews #blacksky #bluesky #activitypub
  • FEP 11dd: Context Ownership and Inheritance

    Moved Fediverso fep activitypub
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    I have amended the text of the FEP to clarify a couple of things, but also changed the inheritance logic following this month's WG meeting and subsequent discussion on ActivityPub.space. Instead of recommending that replies inherit context from the object it is in reply to, implementors must find the root node (how, is out of scope; tree traversal or context resolution are two ways that come to mind) and inherit its context. This will simplify context resolution and pave the way for other actions like moving, crossposting, forking, locking, etc. I also added in a blurb about situations in which a context would explicitly not be inherited.
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    rimu@piefed.social that's surprising, isn't aguppe just a standard 1b12 community? What integration did you have to add?
  • On Discourse and Decentralisation

    Uncategorized activitypub
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    @ikuturso @fediversereport thanks! That was my experience also.
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    Ah. Yes, I'll add that. Thanks!
  • OK friends!

    Uncategorized activitypub wordpress
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    @Edent @blog wooo

Gli ultimi otto messaggi ricevuti dalla Federazione
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    @stefano Ennio Morricone was an amazing composer!
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    Sbarca sul Dark Web DIG AI! Senza Account, Senza costi e … senza nessuna censura📌 Link all'articolo : https://www.redhotcyber.com/post/sbarca-sul-dark-web-dig-ai-senza-account-senza-costi-e-senza-nessuna-censura/#redhotcyber #news #cybersecurity #intelligenzaartificiale #malware #darkweb #hacking #ai #digai
  • Sondaggione

    Fediverso fediverso
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    @77nnA dirla proprio tutta il #Natale di #Cristo dovrebbe essere Santo prima che buono… 😅😁😜
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    È Natale… poi arriva Capodanno… e subito dopo la Befana.Un trittico di giorni che, per chi ci crede o no, ha un potere strano ma reale… quello di rallentare il rumore e far respirare la testa.Allora dichiariamolo ufficialmente, un periodo di pausa e leggerezza. Un periodo in cui proviamo, anche solo un po’, a essere più positivi verso tutti. A rispondere con un sorriso invece che con un muro. A dare spazio a ciò che unisce, invece che a ciò che divide.Perché l’anno nuovo è lì, ormai e io voglio che qualcosa cambi.Lo so… sembrano i soliti propositi che si ripetono ogni anno. Ma stavolta lo sento diverso. Non so se in bene o in male, però so una cosa con certezza… io ci voglio entrare dentro, in questo 2026, con intenzione e coraggio.E la mia scelta è chiara.Voglio dedicarmi più che mai al #Fediverso italiano. Non per “fare scena”, non per parlare… ma per fare. Per migliorarlo, anche solo di un centimetro alla volta. Più accoglienza, più collaborazione, più comunità, più persone che si aiutano invece di farsi la guerra per niente.Ci riuscirò?Qualcuno seguirà l’esempio?Chi già ci sta provando avrà voglia di unire le forze?Non lo so.Però so che vale la pena provarci. E che certe cose cambiano solo quando qualcuno smette di chiedere “chi lo farà” e decide “inizio io”.Io ci sto.E tu?🙏@fediverso