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  • Yes, I think I like the idea of clients being able to store data on the server however they like. It reminds me of this description of ATProto that I found recently: https://overreacted.io/a-social-filesystem/

    I guess my question is: once I store my custom stuff in custom places on my server, how do I publish this so other people can find?

    And, object IDs are usually defined by the server. So how would it work to say "create a collection named XYZ and add this object to it"?

    @silverpill @mariusor @trwnh

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  • @benpate @silverpill in a client managed followers collection i would Add you to my followers just like fedi instances currently do silently. "but how can you prove--" yes exactly, how can current fedi prove anyone is a follower either? you need the Follow+Accept pair to both be live without an Undo on either, right? and that's what leads to the "follow state machine" on fedi that drifts out of sync and leads to private posts being leaked to removed followers (which you can't officially do!)

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  • @benpate @silverpill @mariusor none of the IDs should have any semantics; from the outside, there is no distinction between a client managed or server managed collection. likes/shares/etc could be managed by a "client" like mastodon, or even a "default" one. it's not any more complex unless you want to vary the collection responses based on the request headers. for that you need a minimal dynamic layer with an access control policy of some sort. (WAC is the simplest, but ACP is more powerful)

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  • @silverpill @mariusor @trwnh

    I e*love* this idea- especially in principle. I say that because I’m having a hard time wrapping my head around this and how it would be used in practice.

    Do you think you could post an example workflow (or three) to demonstrate how this would work?

    I get that objects could be added to client-defined collections (very cool) but if object/collection IDs don’t have predefined semantics, how will I know where to look to get the data I need?

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  • > The thanks was for your input with regards to collection management.

    @silverpill of course, sorry for the misunderstanding. Doubly so, for forgetting Mitra is Rust, I remembered it to be Python. :D

    And yes, the difficulty is indeed in massaging JSON-LD documents into strongly typed data that are meaningful for library consumers. However I've not despaired yet... there's light at the end of that boring tunnel. :P

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  • @julian It looks simple on the surface, but in reality it is much more complicated than a non-generic server. In addition to activity transfer, generic server needs to maintain collections. First of all, a followers collection, which is often used as a delivery target. Then likes, shares etc. It needs to enforce permissions, to prevent actors on the same server from deleting each other posts.

    This is doable if you only care about activities defined in ActivityPub. But then you want to introduce context collection. And then 50 other extensions. How to do that without special-casing every one of them?

    This is where duck typing (FEP-2277) and unified security model (FEP-fe34) become really handy. No matter what the client sends, you can figure out what it is (an object, an actor, or a collection), and enforce permissions.

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  • @silverpill@mitra.social I find it curious that this needs to be spelled out in an FEP.

    Isn't a generic AP server one that ingests anything and shoves it into the outbox... like a mail transfer agent?

    ... then delivers it dutifully?

    I mean, sure, you can do stuff in between, like spam detection, blocklists, etc etc etc...

    My quick read through of the FEP (and it was quick, because it was a short FEP :stuck_out_tongue:) seems to confirm this.

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  • @silverpill lol, based on the "claims" at the begining, why do I feel like the "thanks" at the end should be in quotations?

    Also I take umbrage with calling what I've been doing for the past 8 years as "being not difficult to build nor an interesting concept". I feel like you, and other developers having the benefit of dynamically typed programming languages, underestimate how that can be worked into robust APIs when you're limited by less versatile stacks.

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  • 0 Votes
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    @trwnh@mastodon.social that's ridiculous. Why does every other AP service have to create activity handlers just to get a baseline permissive behaviour? I understand the consent respecting aspect, but if the behaviour is "allow all", it should be as simple as a flag. Too bad I didn't pay enough attention to the FEP draft. @silverpill@mitra.social @liaizon@social.wake.st
  • 0 Votes
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    After 5 months of chipping away at it, PieFed is now an installable 'app' in the Yunohost store! It's been there for a couple of weeks actually but until this weekend it had a scary red exclamation mark because some automated tests hadn't ran yet. But that's gone now so I feel confident about recommending it to others. Yunohost is a linux distro for servers that has a web gui for installing and managing services, that takes all the hassle out of self-hosting. How to get started with Yunohost. @squirrel@piefed.kobel.fyi and @michael@piefed.chrisco.me have had good success setting up their instances already: https://piefed.social/c/piefed_meta/p/1561141/thanks-to-rimu-ericgaspar-and-tituspijean-yunohost-has-a-working-piefed-setup
  • 0 Votes
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    @julian no, mastodon doesn't use salmon anymore, not since a long time ago. they switched to websub then activitypub direct delivery.on the indieweb side, salmention is an extension to webmention, where upon receiving a webmention where someone replied to you, you add that reply to your html then send a webmention up the reply chain to whoever you replied to, and they will fetch your html and find the new downstream reply, add it to *their* html, send a webmention upstream, and so on.
  • Piefed community tags

    Technical Discussion piefed
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    Another tricky aspect of this is different clients have all kinds of different designs and colors so depending on the situation the tags could look garish and crazy. But on the other hand a bit of crazy is fun.