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  3. WordPress Federation: Recap of 2025

WordPress Federation: Recap of 2025

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  • activitypub.blog@activitypub.blogA activitypub.blog@activitypub.blog

    In June, we published our 2025 roadmap: Building the Future of WordPress Federation, outlining the areas we wanted to focus on for the rest of the year.

    As we step into 2026, it’s time to look back at how the roadmap held up and what we shipped in 2025.

    2025 at a Glance

    2025 turned out to be an ambitious and, at times, challenging timeline. Even so, we were able to make meaningful progress across most of the areas we set out to work on.

    Over the course of the year, we introduced the Following feature, significantly expanded moderation tooling, refined actor handling, and improved the reliability and performance of core federation workflows. Along the way, we also shipped a first experimental draft of the Reader, offering an early look at what reading the Fediverse inside WordPress could become.

    Not everything on the roadmap was completed, but we’re happy with how much we were able to achieve and with the foundations that are now in place for what comes next.

    Roadmap

    Below is a review of the roadmap topics we outlined for 2025, what we worked on, and what remains open.

    Followers / Following ✅

    Work in 2025 expanded ActivityPub beyond followers by introducing the Following feature, allowing WordPress sites and users to actively follow accounts on the Fediverse.

    WordPress admin Followings page showing a list of 3 accepted follows: notiz.blog, pfefferle (Matthias Pfefferle), and obenland (Konstantin Obenland). The page includes a Follow form for adding new followers via username or profile link, bulk actions dropdown, and an explanation of the ActivityPub follow request protocol.

    Alongside this, we improved the reliability and performance of both follower and following lists, including better synchronization across instances and faster resolution and display of large collections.

    This work also laid the foundation for later features, such as the experimental Reader.

    Related release posts:

    • 7.6.0 — Command, Sync & Go
    • 7.7.0 — Extra Quotable
    • 7.8.0 – Happy Holiday

    Actors ✅

    We continued refining how local and remote actors are represented and resolved. Internal refactors reduced special-case handling and improved consistency and performance across actor resolution, including follower, following, and block lists.

    This work primarily affected internal behavior rather than user-facing UI.

    Related release posts:

    • 7.6.0 — Command, Sync & Go
    • 7.7.0 — Extra Quotable

    Moderation ✅

    In 2025, ActivityPub-specific moderation was significantly expanded. Site-wide and personal blocking now cover domains, keywords, and individual actors, with consistent checks applied to incoming activities.

    User profile settings in WordPress displaying options to block ActivityPub domains and keywords, with fields to add or remove entries.

    We added blocklist subscriptions with scheduled syncing and bulk domain imports, including support for community-maintained lists such as the IFTAS DNI list. Moderation handling was also refined with improved reject behavior for quote interactions.

    Related release posts:

    • 7.6.0 — Command, Sync & Go
    • 7.7.0 — Extra Quotable
    • 7.8.0 – Happy Holidays

    Reader 🧪

    A screenshot of the reader implementation.

    An experimental Reader UI was introduced behind a feature flag. When enabled, it adds a “Social Web” area to the dashboard where posts and shares from followed accounts can be read inside WordPress.

    The feature is disabled by default and explicitly marked as experimental.

    Related release posts:

    • 7.8.0 – Happy Holidays

    Direct Messages ⏸️

    Direct Messages were not implemented in 2025. This remains an open roadmap topic for future consideration once related foundations mature further.

    Fully Delete Profiles ✅

    Deletion semantics were improved to better support explicit federated cleanup. Delete activities are now sent when WordPress users are removed, and deletion-related handling was aligned across activity processing.

    A CLI-based self-destruct command was introduced to allow site owners to explicitly remove their site’s federated presence.

    Related release posts:

    • 7.3.0 – Ctrl+Fed+Delete

    Client-to-Server API ⏸️

    Client-to-Server API support was not implemented in 2025. No user-facing features shipped under this topic.

    Beyond the Roadmap

    While the roadmap helped guide our focus in 2025, not everything that shipped was planned from the start. Some features emerged from day-to-day usage, feedback, and practical needs that became clearer over time.

    A few of those are worth highlighting.

    Quotes

    Support for quote interactions improved significantly over the year. We refined detection and handling of quoted replies and links, added proper handling for quote comments, and improved how quote permissions are revoked when quoted content is deleted. This made quoted interactions more reliable and consistent across instances.

    Related release posts:

    • 7.7.0 — Extra Quotable
    • 7.8.0 – Happy Holidays

    Onboarding

    We also improved onboarding for new users by adding clearer guidance and better defaults after plugin activation. This helped reduce friction for sites federating for the first time and made initial setup more approachable.

    Related release posts:

    • What we shipped so far in 2025
    • 7.6.0 — Command, Sync & Go

    Extra Fields UI

    While not originally planned as a roadmap item, work on Extra Fields resulted in a more flexible and user-friendly UI. New blocks and layout options made it easier to display federated profile data in different formats, allowing themes to choose how much structured information to surface.

    Related release posts:

    • 7.7.0 — Extra Quotable

    Wrapping up

    Looking back, 2025 was a year of steady progress. We focused on the foundations we set out to improve, shipped meaningful features along the way, and left room for unplanned work that addressed real needs as they came up.

    Now we’d love to hear from you: What was your favorite feature this year? What are you most excited about and what do you still miss or hope to see next?

    Your feedback has shaped this project throughout 2025, and it continues to guide where we go from here. We’re already working on our 2026 timeline, and your ideas, experiences, and questions are an important part of that process.

    Thanks for being part of the journey and see you on the Fediverse.

    A This user is from outside of this forum
    A This user is from outside of this forum
    autumnstuff@mastodon.social
    wrote last edited by
    #2

    @activitypub.blog wonderful...

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • activitypub.blog@activitypub.blogA activitypub.blog@activitypub.blog

      In June, we published our 2025 roadmap: Building the Future of WordPress Federation, outlining the areas we wanted to focus on for the rest of the year.

      As we step into 2026, it’s time to look back at how the roadmap held up and what we shipped in 2025.

      2025 at a Glance

      2025 turned out to be an ambitious and, at times, challenging timeline. Even so, we were able to make meaningful progress across most of the areas we set out to work on.

      Over the course of the year, we introduced the Following feature, significantly expanded moderation tooling, refined actor handling, and improved the reliability and performance of core federation workflows. Along the way, we also shipped a first experimental draft of the Reader, offering an early look at what reading the Fediverse inside WordPress could become.

      Not everything on the roadmap was completed, but we’re happy with how much we were able to achieve and with the foundations that are now in place for what comes next.

      Roadmap

      Below is a review of the roadmap topics we outlined for 2025, what we worked on, and what remains open.

      Followers / Following ✅

      Work in 2025 expanded ActivityPub beyond followers by introducing the Following feature, allowing WordPress sites and users to actively follow accounts on the Fediverse.

      WordPress admin Followings page showing a list of 3 accepted follows: notiz.blog, pfefferle (Matthias Pfefferle), and obenland (Konstantin Obenland). The page includes a Follow form for adding new followers via username or profile link, bulk actions dropdown, and an explanation of the ActivityPub follow request protocol.

      Alongside this, we improved the reliability and performance of both follower and following lists, including better synchronization across instances and faster resolution and display of large collections.

      This work also laid the foundation for later features, such as the experimental Reader.

      Related release posts:

      • 7.6.0 — Command, Sync & Go
      • 7.7.0 — Extra Quotable
      • 7.8.0 – Happy Holiday

      Actors ✅

      We continued refining how local and remote actors are represented and resolved. Internal refactors reduced special-case handling and improved consistency and performance across actor resolution, including follower, following, and block lists.

      This work primarily affected internal behavior rather than user-facing UI.

      Related release posts:

      • 7.6.0 — Command, Sync & Go
      • 7.7.0 — Extra Quotable

      Moderation ✅

      In 2025, ActivityPub-specific moderation was significantly expanded. Site-wide and personal blocking now cover domains, keywords, and individual actors, with consistent checks applied to incoming activities.

      User profile settings in WordPress displaying options to block ActivityPub domains and keywords, with fields to add or remove entries.

      We added blocklist subscriptions with scheduled syncing and bulk domain imports, including support for community-maintained lists such as the IFTAS DNI list. Moderation handling was also refined with improved reject behavior for quote interactions.

      Related release posts:

      • 7.6.0 — Command, Sync & Go
      • 7.7.0 — Extra Quotable
      • 7.8.0 – Happy Holidays

      Reader 🧪

      A screenshot of the reader implementation.

      An experimental Reader UI was introduced behind a feature flag. When enabled, it adds a “Social Web” area to the dashboard where posts and shares from followed accounts can be read inside WordPress.

      The feature is disabled by default and explicitly marked as experimental.

      Related release posts:

      • 7.8.0 – Happy Holidays

      Direct Messages ⏸️

      Direct Messages were not implemented in 2025. This remains an open roadmap topic for future consideration once related foundations mature further.

      Fully Delete Profiles ✅

      Deletion semantics were improved to better support explicit federated cleanup. Delete activities are now sent when WordPress users are removed, and deletion-related handling was aligned across activity processing.

      A CLI-based self-destruct command was introduced to allow site owners to explicitly remove their site’s federated presence.

      Related release posts:

      • 7.3.0 – Ctrl+Fed+Delete

      Client-to-Server API ⏸️

      Client-to-Server API support was not implemented in 2025. No user-facing features shipped under this topic.

      Beyond the Roadmap

      While the roadmap helped guide our focus in 2025, not everything that shipped was planned from the start. Some features emerged from day-to-day usage, feedback, and practical needs that became clearer over time.

      A few of those are worth highlighting.

      Quotes

      Support for quote interactions improved significantly over the year. We refined detection and handling of quoted replies and links, added proper handling for quote comments, and improved how quote permissions are revoked when quoted content is deleted. This made quoted interactions more reliable and consistent across instances.

      Related release posts:

      • 7.7.0 — Extra Quotable
      • 7.8.0 – Happy Holidays

      Onboarding

      We also improved onboarding for new users by adding clearer guidance and better defaults after plugin activation. This helped reduce friction for sites federating for the first time and made initial setup more approachable.

      Related release posts:

      • What we shipped so far in 2025
      • 7.6.0 — Command, Sync & Go

      Extra Fields UI

      While not originally planned as a roadmap item, work on Extra Fields resulted in a more flexible and user-friendly UI. New blocks and layout options made it easier to display federated profile data in different formats, allowing themes to choose how much structured information to surface.

      Related release posts:

      • 7.7.0 — Extra Quotable

      Wrapping up

      Looking back, 2025 was a year of steady progress. We focused on the foundations we set out to improve, shipped meaningful features along the way, and left room for unplanned work that addressed real needs as they came up.

      Now we’d love to hear from you: What was your favorite feature this year? What are you most excited about and what do you still miss or hope to see next?

      Your feedback has shaped this project throughout 2025, and it continues to guide where we go from here. We’re already working on our 2026 timeline, and your ideas, experiences, and questions are an important part of that process.

      Thanks for being part of the journey and see you on the Fediverse.

      E This user is from outside of this forum
      E This user is from outside of this forum
      elettrona@poliversity.it
      wrote last edited by
      #3

      @activitypub.blog Thinking of 2026 now; I have a particular feedback, the possibility to interact from Mastodon directly, as the plugin "enable mastodon apps" from Alex Kirk doesn't work with all clients.

      pfefferle@mastodon.socialP 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • activitypub.blog@activitypub.blogA activitypub.blog@activitypub.blog

        In June, we published our 2025 roadmap: Building the Future of WordPress Federation, outlining the areas we wanted to focus on for the rest of the year.

        As we step into 2026, it’s time to look back at how the roadmap held up and what we shipped in 2025.

        2025 at a Glance

        2025 turned out to be an ambitious and, at times, challenging timeline. Even so, we were able to make meaningful progress across most of the areas we set out to work on.

        Over the course of the year, we introduced the Following feature, significantly expanded moderation tooling, refined actor handling, and improved the reliability and performance of core federation workflows. Along the way, we also shipped a first experimental draft of the Reader, offering an early look at what reading the Fediverse inside WordPress could become.

        Not everything on the roadmap was completed, but we’re happy with how much we were able to achieve and with the foundations that are now in place for what comes next.

        Roadmap

        Below is a review of the roadmap topics we outlined for 2025, what we worked on, and what remains open.

        Followers / Following ✅

        Work in 2025 expanded ActivityPub beyond followers by introducing the Following feature, allowing WordPress sites and users to actively follow accounts on the Fediverse.

        WordPress admin Followings page showing a list of 3 accepted follows: notiz.blog, pfefferle (Matthias Pfefferle), and obenland (Konstantin Obenland). The page includes a Follow form for adding new followers via username or profile link, bulk actions dropdown, and an explanation of the ActivityPub follow request protocol.

        Alongside this, we improved the reliability and performance of both follower and following lists, including better synchronization across instances and faster resolution and display of large collections.

        This work also laid the foundation for later features, such as the experimental Reader.

        Related release posts:

        • 7.6.0 — Command, Sync & Go
        • 7.7.0 — Extra Quotable
        • 7.8.0 – Happy Holiday

        Actors ✅

        We continued refining how local and remote actors are represented and resolved. Internal refactors reduced special-case handling and improved consistency and performance across actor resolution, including follower, following, and block lists.

        This work primarily affected internal behavior rather than user-facing UI.

        Related release posts:

        • 7.6.0 — Command, Sync & Go
        • 7.7.0 — Extra Quotable

        Moderation ✅

        In 2025, ActivityPub-specific moderation was significantly expanded. Site-wide and personal blocking now cover domains, keywords, and individual actors, with consistent checks applied to incoming activities.

        User profile settings in WordPress displaying options to block ActivityPub domains and keywords, with fields to add or remove entries.

        We added blocklist subscriptions with scheduled syncing and bulk domain imports, including support for community-maintained lists such as the IFTAS DNI list. Moderation handling was also refined with improved reject behavior for quote interactions.

        Related release posts:

        • 7.6.0 — Command, Sync & Go
        • 7.7.0 — Extra Quotable
        • 7.8.0 – Happy Holidays

        Reader 🧪

        A screenshot of the reader implementation.

        An experimental Reader UI was introduced behind a feature flag. When enabled, it adds a “Social Web” area to the dashboard where posts and shares from followed accounts can be read inside WordPress.

        The feature is disabled by default and explicitly marked as experimental.

        Related release posts:

        • 7.8.0 – Happy Holidays

        Direct Messages ⏸️

        Direct Messages were not implemented in 2025. This remains an open roadmap topic for future consideration once related foundations mature further.

        Fully Delete Profiles ✅

        Deletion semantics were improved to better support explicit federated cleanup. Delete activities are now sent when WordPress users are removed, and deletion-related handling was aligned across activity processing.

        A CLI-based self-destruct command was introduced to allow site owners to explicitly remove their site’s federated presence.

        Related release posts:

        • 7.3.0 – Ctrl+Fed+Delete

        Client-to-Server API ⏸️

        Client-to-Server API support was not implemented in 2025. No user-facing features shipped under this topic.

        Beyond the Roadmap

        While the roadmap helped guide our focus in 2025, not everything that shipped was planned from the start. Some features emerged from day-to-day usage, feedback, and practical needs that became clearer over time.

        A few of those are worth highlighting.

        Quotes

        Support for quote interactions improved significantly over the year. We refined detection and handling of quoted replies and links, added proper handling for quote comments, and improved how quote permissions are revoked when quoted content is deleted. This made quoted interactions more reliable and consistent across instances.

        Related release posts:

        • 7.7.0 — Extra Quotable
        • 7.8.0 – Happy Holidays

        Onboarding

        We also improved onboarding for new users by adding clearer guidance and better defaults after plugin activation. This helped reduce friction for sites federating for the first time and made initial setup more approachable.

        Related release posts:

        • What we shipped so far in 2025
        • 7.6.0 — Command, Sync & Go

        Extra Fields UI

        While not originally planned as a roadmap item, work on Extra Fields resulted in a more flexible and user-friendly UI. New blocks and layout options made it easier to display federated profile data in different formats, allowing themes to choose how much structured information to surface.

        Related release posts:

        • 7.7.0 — Extra Quotable

        Wrapping up

        Looking back, 2025 was a year of steady progress. We focused on the foundations we set out to improve, shipped meaningful features along the way, and left room for unplanned work that addressed real needs as they came up.

        Now we’d love to hear from you: What was your favorite feature this year? What are you most excited about and what do you still miss or hope to see next?

        Your feedback has shaped this project throughout 2025, and it continues to guide where we go from here. We’re already working on our 2026 timeline, and your ideas, experiences, and questions are an important part of that process.

        Thanks for being part of the journey and see you on the Fediverse.

        harce@mastodon.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
        harce@mastodon.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
        harce@mastodon.social
        wrote last edited by
        #4

        @activitypub.blog hope federation with Lemmy and Piefed gets on this years list, as better integration with threadiverse could really move things forward 🖤

        pfefferle@mastodon.socialP 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • harce@mastodon.socialH harce@mastodon.social

          @activitypub.blog hope federation with Lemmy and Piefed gets on this years list, as better integration with threadiverse could really move things forward 🖤

          pfefferle@mastodon.socialP This user is from outside of this forum
          pfefferle@mastodon.socialP This user is from outside of this forum
          pfefferle@mastodon.social
          wrote last edited by
          #5

          @harce @activitypub.blog what problems do you have with lemmy?

          harce@mastodon.socialH 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • pfefferle@mastodon.socialP pfefferle@mastodon.social

            @harce @activitypub.blog what problems do you have with lemmy?

            harce@mastodon.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
            harce@mastodon.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
            harce@mastodon.social
            wrote last edited by
            #6

            @pfefferle @activitypub.blog havent done checks with other sites, but asumed it would be the case for all:
            An AP + event federation enabled wordpress we have doesnt update on a Lemmy instance when used as a multiuser/community;

            https://adapulawska.org
            https://szmer.info/c/kolektyw@adapulawska.org

            Last time I checked manually searching an URL would fetch it and update the community post list. My understanding was its some interoperability issues to be resolved.

            pfefferle@mastodon.socialP 2 Replies Last reply
            0
            • harce@mastodon.socialH harce@mastodon.social

              @pfefferle @activitypub.blog havent done checks with other sites, but asumed it would be the case for all:
              An AP + event federation enabled wordpress we have doesnt update on a Lemmy instance when used as a multiuser/community;

              https://adapulawska.org
              https://szmer.info/c/kolektyw@adapulawska.org

              Last time I checked manually searching an URL would fetch it and update the community post list. My understanding was its some interoperability issues to be resolved.

              pfefferle@mastodon.socialP This user is from outside of this forum
              pfefferle@mastodon.socialP This user is from outside of this forum
              pfefferle@mastodon.social
              wrote last edited by
              #7

              @harce @activitypub.blog you can check @notiz.blog on piefed and lemmy. It should work on both sites!

              On lemmy you should be able to even look up posts through a search. I have not much experience with piefed though.

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • harce@mastodon.socialH harce@mastodon.social

                @pfefferle @activitypub.blog havent done checks with other sites, but asumed it would be the case for all:
                An AP + event federation enabled wordpress we have doesnt update on a Lemmy instance when used as a multiuser/community;

                https://adapulawska.org
                https://szmer.info/c/kolektyw@adapulawska.org

                Last time I checked manually searching an URL would fetch it and update the community post list. My understanding was its some interoperability issues to be resolved.

                pfefferle@mastodon.socialP This user is from outside of this forum
                pfefferle@mastodon.socialP This user is from outside of this forum
                pfefferle@mastodon.social
                wrote last edited by
                #8

                @harce @activitypub.blog here are some screenshots

                harce@mastodon.socialH 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • pfefferle@mastodon.socialP pfefferle@mastodon.social

                  @harce @activitypub.blog here are some screenshots

                  harce@mastodon.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
                  harce@mastodon.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
                  harce@mastodon.social
                  wrote last edited by
                  #9

                  @pfefferle @activitypub.blog yes, i can see that working in this case. Ill do some tests and come back, as its clearly not working as expected on our site.

                  pfefferle@mastodon.socialP 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • harce@mastodon.socialH harce@mastodon.social

                    @pfefferle @activitypub.blog yes, i can see that working in this case. Ill do some tests and come back, as its clearly not working as expected on our site.

                    pfefferle@mastodon.socialP This user is from outside of this forum
                    pfefferle@mastodon.socialP This user is from outside of this forum
                    pfefferle@mastodon.social
                    wrote last edited by
                    #10

                    @harce @activitypub.blog you have to use the combined actor mode (users and blog-user). This way, the blog-user acts as the community and the users are publishing into the community.

                    maybe I should write a blog post about that!

                    harce@mastodon.socialH 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • pfefferle@mastodon.socialP pfefferle@mastodon.social

                      @harce @activitypub.blog you have to use the combined actor mode (users and blog-user). This way, the blog-user acts as the community and the users are publishing into the community.

                      maybe I should write a blog post about that!

                      harce@mastodon.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
                      harce@mastodon.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
                      harce@mastodon.social
                      wrote last edited by
                      #11

                      @pfefferle @activitypub.blog thats what https://szmer.info/c/kolektyw@adapulawska.org is (should be)

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • E elettrona@poliversity.it

                        @activitypub.blog Thinking of 2026 now; I have a particular feedback, the possibility to interact from Mastodon directly, as the plugin "enable mastodon apps" from Alex Kirk doesn't work with all clients.

                        pfefferle@mastodon.socialP This user is from outside of this forum
                        pfefferle@mastodon.socialP This user is from outside of this forum
                        pfefferle@mastodon.social
                        wrote last edited by
                        #12

                        @elettrona @activitypub.blog I hope 2026 will be the year, to boost ActivityPub also as Client2Server API!

                        1 Reply Last reply
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