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  4. Would you like to see full default interoperability between #ATproto and #ActivityPub without a bridge?

Would you like to see full default interoperability between #ATproto and #ActivityPub without a bridge?

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atprotoactivitypub
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  • evan@cosocial.caundefined evan@cosocial.ca

    @blaine @wjmaggos I think that would be a great poll to post! You should do it.

    chris@mstdn.chrisalemany.caundefined Questo utente è esterno a questo forum
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    chris@mstdn.chrisalemany.ca
    scritto su ultima modifica di
    #21

    @evan @blaine @wjmaggos

    Do you want Bluesky and the Fediverse to just be able to talk to each other without 'bridges', however that might happen?

    Yes please!!

    evan@cosocial.caundefined 1 Risposta Ultima Risposta
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      evan@cosocial.ca
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      #22

      @julian @wjmaggos so, I think this is a very deep question.

      evan@cosocial.caundefined 1 Risposta Ultima Risposta
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      • evan@cosocial.caundefined evan@cosocial.ca

        @julian @wjmaggos so, I think this is a very deep question.

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        evan@cosocial.ca
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        #23

        @julian @wjmaggos

        There are a lot of application domains where multiple competing protocols prevent growth of the industry as a whole. I'd pick Internet of Things and instant messaging as two good examples.

        evan@cosocial.caundefined 1 Risposta Ultima Risposta
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        • evan@cosocial.caundefined evan@cosocial.ca

          @julian @wjmaggos

          There are a lot of application domains where multiple competing protocols prevent growth of the industry as a whole. I'd pick Internet of Things and instant messaging as two good examples.

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          evan@cosocial.ca
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          #24

          @julian @wjmaggos

          There are others where a single protocol has become the overwhelming default, and agreeing on that protocol lets us move up the stack and produce incredible value for everyone. HTTP and SMTP are two good examples.

          evan@cosocial.caundefined 2 Risposte Ultima Risposta
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          • evan@cosocial.caundefined evan@cosocial.ca

            @julian @wjmaggos

            There are others where a single protocol has become the overwhelming default, and agreeing on that protocol lets us move up the stack and produce incredible value for everyone. HTTP and SMTP are two good examples.

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            evan@cosocial.ca
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            #25

            @julian @wjmaggos I think it's really hard to tell which application domains are going to be the ones that converge and which are going to be the ones that diverge.

            evan@cosocial.caundefined 1 Risposta Ultima Risposta
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            • evan@cosocial.caundefined evan@cosocial.ca

              @julian @wjmaggos I think it's really hard to tell which application domains are going to be the ones that converge and which are going to be the ones that diverge.

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              evan@cosocial.ca
              scritto su ultima modifica di evan@cosocial.ca
              #26

              @julian @wjmaggos I have some rough guesses.

              One is some kind of threshold value in active protocols. I think Randall's instinct is correct: having a dozen or more active protocols in an application area makes it really hard to converge.

              evan@cosocial.caundefined 1 Risposta Ultima Risposta
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              • evan@cosocial.caundefined evan@cosocial.ca

                @julian @wjmaggos I have some rough guesses.

                One is some kind of threshold value in active protocols. I think Randall's instinct is correct: having a dozen or more active protocols in an application area makes it really hard to converge.

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                evan@cosocial.ca
                scritto su ultima modifica di evan@cosocial.ca
                #27

                @julian @wjmaggos I also think that the difference between open protocols and proprietary protocols matters. Open protocols level the playing field, while commercial protocols concentrate power in one entity. Other players in the space have an incentive to focus on open alternatives to commercial protocols, and sometimes this can begin convergence. Having active or dominant commercial protocols in a space is a source of instability.

                evan@cosocial.caundefined 1 Risposta Ultima Risposta
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                • evan@cosocial.caundefined evan@cosocial.ca

                  @julian @wjmaggos I also think that the difference between open protocols and proprietary protocols matters. Open protocols level the playing field, while commercial protocols concentrate power in one entity. Other players in the space have an incentive to focus on open alternatives to commercial protocols, and sometimes this can begin convergence. Having active or dominant commercial protocols in a space is a source of instability.

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                  evan@cosocial.ca
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                  #28

                  @julian @wjmaggos but I don't think either of these are sufficient. Atom, for example, was (partially) created to provide convergence for feed formats within the auspices of a formal standards body. It didn't achieve that goal.

                  evan@cosocial.caundefined 1 Risposta Ultima Risposta
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                  • evan@cosocial.caundefined evan@cosocial.ca

                    @julian @wjmaggos but I don't think either of these are sufficient. Atom, for example, was (partially) created to provide convergence for feed formats within the auspices of a formal standards body. It didn't achieve that goal.

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                    evan@cosocial.ca
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                    #29

                    @julian @wjmaggos overall, I think that in general application domains where a single protocol becomes the default are ones that flourish. Application domains where multiple protocols compete languish. Not always, but often.

                    evan@cosocial.caundefined 1 Risposta Ultima Risposta
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                    • blaine@mastodon.socialundefined blaine@mastodon.social

                      @evan @wjmaggos it's not my message. My message to technologists was "the key piece of interop for humans is identity" and I was told "webfinger isn't part of activitypub" and "domain names are how we do identity on the internet" (despite the idea that paying $25/year to get to manage DNS isn't an end-user-achievable thing in the world we live in) and after years of this I gave up. It makes me sad that Bluesky went with domain names because consistent format really matters, but 🤷‍♂️

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                      totalsonic@mastodon.social
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                      #30

                      @blaine @evan @wjmaggos on a tangent to this, it took me 10 minutes each to get a working instances of OSSN & Piwogo up on my website hosted on Bluehost servers, using Softaculous scripts, simply because they can be installed in directories on existing domains. Meanwhile, I have failed to date in self hosting Fediverse instances, limited by needing to register yet another domain name (which I've done anyway), and not figuring out secure port forwarding for a home Yunohost server.

                      evan@cosocial.caundefined 1 Risposta Ultima Risposta
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                      • evan@cosocial.caundefined evan@cosocial.ca

                        @julian @wjmaggos

                        There are others where a single protocol has become the overwhelming default, and agreeing on that protocol lets us move up the stack and produce incredible value for everyone. HTTP and SMTP are two good examples.

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                        evan@cosocial.ca
                        scritto su ultima modifica di
                        #31

                        @julian @wjmaggos I don't know if there is a good book about how SMTP won, by the way. It would be a great read. In hindsight, it seems inevitable, but in the late 1980s and early 1990s it was far from a sure thing. There were dozens of commercial network email protocols already in use, and a few interoperation standards, like X.400.

                        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X.400

                        evan@cosocial.caundefined 1 Risposta Ultima Risposta
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                        • evan@cosocial.caundefined evan@cosocial.ca

                          @julian @wjmaggos overall, I think that in general application domains where a single protocol becomes the default are ones that flourish. Application domains where multiple protocols compete languish. Not always, but often.

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                          evan@cosocial.ca
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                          #32

                          @julian @wjmaggos I don't have the secret sauce for how to get there, though. Trying my best.

                          trwnh@mastodon.socialundefined 1 Risposta Ultima Risposta
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                          • evan@cosocial.caundefined evan@cosocial.ca

                            @julian @wjmaggos I don't know if there is a good book about how SMTP won, by the way. It would be a great read. In hindsight, it seems inevitable, but in the late 1980s and early 1990s it was far from a sure thing. There were dozens of commercial network email protocols already in use, and a few interoperation standards, like X.400.

                            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X.400

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                            evan@cosocial.ca
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                            #33

                            @julian @wjmaggos I think there's something to Richard Gabriel's famous observation that "Worse is better". SMTP is pretty damned simple.

                            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Worse_is_better

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                            • totalsonic@mastodon.socialundefined totalsonic@mastodon.social

                              @blaine @evan @wjmaggos on a tangent to this, it took me 10 minutes each to get a working instances of OSSN & Piwogo up on my website hosted on Bluehost servers, using Softaculous scripts, simply because they can be installed in directories on existing domains. Meanwhile, I have failed to date in self hosting Fediverse instances, limited by needing to register yet another domain name (which I've done anyway), and not figuring out secure port forwarding for a home Yunohost server.

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                              evan@cosocial.ca
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                              #34

                              @TotalSonic @blaine @wjmaggos you're right; that is a tangent.

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                              • chris@mstdn.chrisalemany.caundefined chris@mstdn.chrisalemany.ca

                                @evan @blaine @wjmaggos

                                Do you want Bluesky and the Fediverse to just be able to talk to each other without 'bridges', however that might happen?

                                Yes please!!

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                                evan@cosocial.ca
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                                #35

                                @chris @blaine @wjmaggos it's funny that you say "without bridges" and "however that may happen" in the same breath. If we don't care how it happens, why rule out one particularly powerful technique for interoperability?

                                BridgyFed works GREAT. It's fucking amazing. Is there room for improvement? Absolutely. But it's a really good service.

                                wjmaggos@liberal.cityundefined 1 Risposta Ultima Risposta
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                                • evan@cosocial.caundefined evan@cosocial.ca

                                  @chris @blaine @wjmaggos it's funny that you say "without bridges" and "however that may happen" in the same breath. If we don't care how it happens, why rule out one particularly powerful technique for interoperability?

                                  BridgyFed works GREAT. It's fucking amazing. Is there room for improvement? Absolutely. But it's a really good service.

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                                  wjmaggos@liberal.city
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                                  #36

                                  @evan @chris @blaine

                                  it is amazing. I guess my problem is that it's opt in.

                                  *ducks*

                                  evan@cosocial.caundefined 1 Risposta Ultima Risposta
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                                  • wjmaggos@liberal.cityundefined wjmaggos@liberal.city

                                    @evan @chris @blaine

                                    it is amazing. I guess my problem is that it's opt in.

                                    *ducks*

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                                    #37

                                    @wjmaggos @chris @blaine one of my big problems with it too. I think @anewsocial are aware of that limitation and are working on some solutions.

                                    quillmatiq@mastodon.socialundefined 1 Risposta Ultima Risposta
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                                    • evan@cosocial.caundefined evan@cosocial.ca

                                      @julian @wjmaggos I don't have the secret sauce for how to get there, though. Trying my best.

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                                      #38

                                      @evan @julian @wjmaggos what would you consider to be the "application domain" of HTTP, and what needs to be built above it? ironically, i think if you look at the OSI model, then HTTP is already at the uppermost "layer 7", the application layer -- and attempts to build networks on top of HTTP are in effect virtualizing lower layers! so instead of a virtual 3-7 on top of HTTP's 7, why not use HTTP's 7 directly? how many nested virtualized app layers do we need?

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                                      • trwnh@mastodon.socialundefined trwnh@mastodon.social

                                        @evan @julian @wjmaggos what would you consider to be the "application domain" of HTTP, and what needs to be built above it? ironically, i think if you look at the OSI model, then HTTP is already at the uppermost "layer 7", the application layer -- and attempts to build networks on top of HTTP are in effect virtualizing lower layers! so instead of a virtual 3-7 on top of HTTP's 7, why not use HTTP's 7 directly? how many nested virtualized app layers do we need?

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                                        #39

                                        @trwnh @julian @wjmaggos hypertext

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                                        • evan@cosocial.caundefined evan@cosocial.ca

                                          @trwnh @julian @wjmaggos hypertext

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                                          #40

                                          @trwnh @julian @wjmaggos "The Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) is an application-level protocol for distributed, collaborative, hypermedia information systems."

                                          https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc2616

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