Evan Prodromou Launches The Social Web Foundation
  • ericjmorey ericjmorey Now 50%

    I wanted to understand their perspective. But that doesn't seem to be something they are willing to share in any more detail.

    There was no implication being made.

    What measure of difficulty of content discovery are you using to determine that it is difficult? What would not difficult content discovery be? What content is there is desired to be discovered What do you mean by, 'there is no "why" here'?

    I have many questions about how people perceive the current state of things and what they view as potential areas for improvement.

    0
  • Evan Prodromou Launches The Social Web Foundation
  • ericjmorey ericjmorey Now 100%

    You've made an awful lot of bad assumptions about me based on a single question that you haven't answered.

    1
  • Evan Prodromou Launches The Social Web Foundation
  • ericjmorey ericjmorey Now 75%

    Seriously. What's up? You're responding with a great amount of negativity. You've accused me of gaslighting and being moronic with no provocation that would warrant either response.

    2
  • Evan Prodromou Launches The Social Web Foundation
  • ericjmorey ericjmorey Now 75%

    I have presented no take.

    Are you doing ok? What's bothering you?

    2
  • Evan Prodromou Launches The Social Web Foundation
  • ericjmorey ericjmorey Now 100%

    Why do you view these as issues to be overcome?

    2
  • The dilema of charging the users and a solution by integrating blockchain to fediverse
  • ericjmorey ericjmorey Now 50%

    The peering agreements are based on network traffic of the customers. Passing through costs to customers is always a thing.

    0
  • The dilema of charging the users and a solution by integrating blockchain to fediverse
  • ericjmorey ericjmorey Now 25%

    Peering agreements have been around for a long time on the internet, they're part the backbone of the internet.

    Peering agreements for internet traffic, what a stupid concept.

    -2
  • Is Sleep Training Harmful?
  • ericjmorey ericjmorey Now 100%

    This might be my favorite post in this community to date.

    1
  • Is Sleep Training Harmful?
  • ericjmorey ericjmorey Now 100%

    Seems like they added one

    2
  • Mozilla is going to shut down their Mastodon instance
  • ericjmorey ericjmorey Now 100%

    Doesn't help that they have offered no explanation at all.

    50
  • Fandom Wiki Considered Harmful
  • ericjmorey ericjmorey Now 100%

    Tux is a blackbelt in Karate, and has many combat skills including using Katanas and flips (which he learned from Kat and Ana). Tux also has an iq of 135. He's also a skilled Marksman. He's good at driving, can slide on his belly, and is resistant to extreme cold, being a penguin. He's also a good general, and of course, he's great at using Computers. Mostly Linux, but he can use Windows a bit too. He's especially good at Emulation.

    LOL

    At least I got a laugh out of it. It does seem pretty useless as a reference though.

    2
  • Instead of algorithms why don't we create a map of Lemmy?
  • ericjmorey ericjmorey Now 100%

    How would this help? What is the problem this addresses?

    3
  • Bluesky continues to soar
  • ericjmorey ericjmorey Now 100%

    Many of the functions provided by a Mastodon service is split into separate services in the AT Protocol. This means there are instances that just handle an end users data, instances that just handle indexing and streaming out the amalgamated end user data being streamed to the "relay", there are instances that are just filtering the stream from the indexing relay. so basically the various backend parts are modular with the AT Protocol rather than monolithic as is assumed by the ActivityPub protocol where separation is assumed to be only between the frontend and backend of the service.

    4
  • Bluesky continues to soar
  • ericjmorey ericjmorey Now 100%

    Bluesky is probably going to capture more of that than Mastodon. But threads is similarly struggling to develop it as well and they have very low barrier for new signups for anyone with a Facebook or Instagram account.

    4
  • Bluesky continues to soar
  • ericjmorey ericjmorey Now 100%

    Many people are most interested in profit as their only KPI and mastodon puts up a lot of hurdles for those people.

    3
  • Bluesky continues to soar
  • ericjmorey ericjmorey Now 100%

    Anything that you're not willing and able to keep financially sustained yet rely upon will likely be used against you by someone with more resources. This is why groups like Fosstodon, Beehaw, and Fedihosting Foundation stand out in these spaces. They are both transparent and financially sustainable. But most of that sustainability relies on unpaid volunteer labor.

    2
  • Bluesky continues to soar
  • ericjmorey ericjmorey Now 100%

    Bluesky has no documentation for running a relay (indexing node). It doesn't seem like they intend to have any documentation on it any time soon. But it is possible to set one up yourself. I don't know anyone that has done so.

    6
  • Welcome to Kagi, the paid search engine full of surprises, which today opened an account in the Fediverse!
  • ericjmorey ericjmorey Now 100%

    I've been using mojeek and ddg, but I've been considering setting up SearXNG on a server.

    8
  • fedify.dev

    cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/14845042 > Fedify is an [ActivityPub](https://activitypub.rocks/) server framework in TypeScript & JavaScript. It aims to eliminate the complexity and redundant boilerplate code when building a federated server app, so that you can focus on your business logic and user experience. > > The key features it provides currently are: > > - Type-safe objects for Activity Vocabulary (including some vendor-specific extensions) > - WebFinger client and server > - HTTP Signatures > - Middleware for handling webhooks > - NodeInfo protocol > - Node.js, Deno, and Bun support > > If you're curious, take a look at the Fedify website! There's comprehensive docs, a demo, a tutorial, example code, and more.

    58
    0
    https://www.amazon.com/b?node=17506527011

    Each story seems to be priced at $1 to $2 or around $5 for a collection for non-prime subscribers. Each ebook is also bundled with an audio book (for prime subscribers at no extra cost). Kindle (.mobi) format only so best accessed with a Kindle device, but also accessible via Kindle Web, Android, iOS apps as well as other options if you're savvy enough to figure that out. Looks like the free offer is for US prime subscribers only. There is a email newsletter for notifications of new collections. Other newsletter options look useful too.

    1
    0
    www.lasso.security

    LLM responds with fake name of packages. Real package made using the fake name and gets installed 30,000 times in 3 months. Malicious actors could use this behavior.

    1
    0
    www.newyorker.com

    For [@jgrim@discuss.online](https://discuss.online/u/jgrim), as promised 😁

    1
    0
    ericjmorey Now
    143 205

    ericjmorey

    discuss.online