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  3. Jack Dorsey skipped ActivityPub, built AtProto, lost Twitter, funded Bluesky, watched it become a company with VCs and a board, said it was "repeating all the mistakes," left, and now funds Nostr.

Jack Dorsey skipped ActivityPub, built AtProto, lost Twitter, funded Bluesky, watched it become a company with VCs and a board, said it was "repeating all the mistakes," left, and now funds Nostr.

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  • rakoo@blah.rako.spaceR rakoo@blah.rako.space
    @ricci @thisismissem @mastodonmigration @baralheia @cwebber

    The atproto model is in the lineage of the web 1.0: everyone has their own website and google indexes them all for everyone to "see" the network. Wherever Google, and the tech industry following its steps, went is the exact direction bluesky is going to go.

    I'd really love to know why you think the AP model doesn't map human societies ? Maybe a concentric model of trust, from closer to larger, is something you have in mind ?
    thisismissem@hachyderm.ioT This user is from outside of this forum
    thisismissem@hachyderm.ioT This user is from outside of this forum
    thisismissem@hachyderm.io
    wrote last edited by
    #249

    @rakoo @ricci AP as implemented places you on a server which is your identity, that server is a specific vertical of a online social presence (microblogging, images, videos, short videos, articles, forums, link aggregator)

    The AP C2S model separates to a degree the identity from the application. You do still only have one social graph and inbox/outbox, so it's not ideal, most people have different social groups on different verticals of platforms.

    But as long as AP is deployed in the topology and systems it is today, it does not do the "thing" that people do socially.

    Mastodon doesn't give you a "community" just because you're on the same server (no local only posting, local feed is too noisy on larger servers), Loops arguably removes all local community thanks to algorithmic feed – I don't think they've a local feed that I've seen in press.

    AT Protocol makes getting into social spaces in different verticals easy. Conceptually AP C2S is very similar: you have a place that is your identity + data, and then you join places with that identity (maybe customising the identity or social graph for that vertical application)

    thisismissem@hachyderm.ioT ricci@discuss.systemsR 2 Replies Last reply
    0
    • thisismissem@hachyderm.ioT thisismissem@hachyderm.io

      @rakoo @ricci AP as implemented places you on a server which is your identity, that server is a specific vertical of a online social presence (microblogging, images, videos, short videos, articles, forums, link aggregator)

      The AP C2S model separates to a degree the identity from the application. You do still only have one social graph and inbox/outbox, so it's not ideal, most people have different social groups on different verticals of platforms.

      But as long as AP is deployed in the topology and systems it is today, it does not do the "thing" that people do socially.

      Mastodon doesn't give you a "community" just because you're on the same server (no local only posting, local feed is too noisy on larger servers), Loops arguably removes all local community thanks to algorithmic feed – I don't think they've a local feed that I've seen in press.

      AT Protocol makes getting into social spaces in different verticals easy. Conceptually AP C2S is very similar: you have a place that is your identity + data, and then you join places with that identity (maybe customising the identity or social graph for that vertical application)

      thisismissem@hachyderm.ioT This user is from outside of this forum
      thisismissem@hachyderm.ioT This user is from outside of this forum
      thisismissem@hachyderm.io
      wrote last edited by
      #250

      @rakoo @ricci have a read of Lauren's article: https://connectedplaces.online/where-does-community-live/

      Yes, community on AT Protocol is a nascent concept still, but the separation of identity + data from applications makes it possible to experiment and have one social graph or many.

      One project doing community spaces on AT Protocol is: https://github.com/collectivesocial/open-social

      rakoo@blah.rako.spaceR 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • rakoo@blah.rako.spaceR rakoo@blah.rako.space
        @ricci @thisismissem @mastodonmigration @baralheia @cwebber

        The atproto model is in the lineage of the web 1.0: everyone has their own website and google indexes them all for everyone to "see" the network. Wherever Google, and the tech industry following its steps, went is the exact direction bluesky is going to go.

        I'd really love to know why you think the AP model doesn't map human societies ? Maybe a concentric model of trust, from closer to larger, is something you have in mind ?
        ricci@discuss.systemsR This user is from outside of this forum
        ricci@discuss.systemsR This user is from outside of this forum
        ricci@discuss.systems
        wrote last edited by
        #251

        @rakoo @baralheia @thisismissem @mastodonmigration @cwebber

        Yeah great question! It's that everything past the local level is flat from a network/protocol level - all communities are 'equidistant' at the network layer, which isn't how it works for human communication and society.

        So I'm agreeing with your point about circles of trust, but down a layer at the protocol - and I don't think it's an accident that Mastodon and other fedi software have not really gone very far in implementing such things given that - while it's certainly possible - it's not inherent in AP.

        But yeah I think AP is far *closer* to how humans actually communicate than atproto

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • thisismissem@hachyderm.ioT thisismissem@hachyderm.io

          @rakoo @ricci have a read of Lauren's article: https://connectedplaces.online/where-does-community-live/

          Yes, community on AT Protocol is a nascent concept still, but the separation of identity + data from applications makes it possible to experiment and have one social graph or many.

          One project doing community spaces on AT Protocol is: https://github.com/collectivesocial/open-social

          rakoo@blah.rako.spaceR This user is from outside of this forum
          rakoo@blah.rako.spaceR This user is from outside of this forum
          rakoo@blah.rako.space
          wrote last edited by
          #252
          @thisismissem @ricci

          yes, if we're looking at mastodon and the model it has created that all microblogging apps have copied, then community doesn't really exist in the technical parts but must be artificially built up. The more interesting example is the threadiverse where communities are literal spaces: people congregate towards one or any number, they are independent from your server and from your identity. This, to me, feels closer to how communities start to create: pick an obvious topic, make obvious-y rules about what is on-topic or not to guide what people can talk about, then possibly graduate from there to another form (maybe a specific, closed community with your people). I do think more visibility should be given to the threadiverse rather than microblogging, or even mastodon, because of all the problems you have listed. And the future direction of AP should definitely split the server from the usage and build apps on the client only !
          mcneely@indieweb.socialM julian@activitypub.spaceJ ricci@discuss.systemsR 3 Replies Last reply
          0
          • rakoo@blah.rako.spaceR rakoo@blah.rako.space
            @thisismissem @ricci

            yes, if we're looking at mastodon and the model it has created that all microblogging apps have copied, then community doesn't really exist in the technical parts but must be artificially built up. The more interesting example is the threadiverse where communities are literal spaces: people congregate towards one or any number, they are independent from your server and from your identity. This, to me, feels closer to how communities start to create: pick an obvious topic, make obvious-y rules about what is on-topic or not to guide what people can talk about, then possibly graduate from there to another form (maybe a specific, closed community with your people). I do think more visibility should be given to the threadiverse rather than microblogging, or even mastodon, because of all the problems you have listed. And the future direction of AP should definitely split the server from the usage and build apps on the client only !
            mcneely@indieweb.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
            mcneely@indieweb.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
            mcneely@indieweb.social
            wrote last edited by
            #253

            @rakoo @ricci @thisismissem this makes the most sense to me. I think "we" on the AP have a hard time with this because we alternate between servers describing themselves as neutral providers a la email or already being community focused (like the Indieweb server I'm on).

            PS by the Threadiverse do you mean Threads and some other assortment of apps?

            I think the way Laurens described reddit as

            rakoo@blah.rako.spaceR 1 Reply Last reply
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            • mcneely@indieweb.socialM mcneely@indieweb.social

              @rakoo @ricci @thisismissem this makes the most sense to me. I think "we" on the AP have a hard time with this because we alternate between servers describing themselves as neutral providers a la email or already being community focused (like the Indieweb server I'm on).

              PS by the Threadiverse do you mean Threads and some other assortment of apps?

              I think the way Laurens described reddit as

              rakoo@blah.rako.spaceR This user is from outside of this forum
              rakoo@blah.rako.spaceR This user is from outside of this forum
              rakoo@blah.rako.space
              wrote last edited by
              #254
              @McNeely @ricci @thisismissem No, it's the reddit-like: lemmy, mbin, piefed, nodebb and even discourse. Basically forums
              mcneely@indieweb.socialM 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • rakoo@blah.rako.spaceR rakoo@blah.rako.space
                @thisismissem @ricci

                yes, if we're looking at mastodon and the model it has created that all microblogging apps have copied, then community doesn't really exist in the technical parts but must be artificially built up. The more interesting example is the threadiverse where communities are literal spaces: people congregate towards one or any number, they are independent from your server and from your identity. This, to me, feels closer to how communities start to create: pick an obvious topic, make obvious-y rules about what is on-topic or not to guide what people can talk about, then possibly graduate from there to another form (maybe a specific, closed community with your people). I do think more visibility should be given to the threadiverse rather than microblogging, or even mastodon, because of all the problems you have listed. And the future direction of AP should definitely split the server from the usage and build apps on the client only !
                julian@activitypub.spaceJ This user is from outside of this forum
                julian@activitypub.spaceJ This user is from outside of this forum
                julian@activitypub.space
                wrote last edited by
                #255

                @rakoo@blah.rako.space completely right.

                The "community" aspect on microblog UI is shallow at best. Instance names and domains are signalling community, but you're still screaming into a public town square about anything and everything.

                Threadiverse absolutely does it better, but the crossover between it and the wider fediverse is minimal at best (I am posting on NodeBB right now.)

                I'm going to be talking about this next week at FediMTL!

                Link Preview Image
                FediMTL - Digital Sovereignty Conference

                A Canadian conference on digital sovereignty and the social web - February 24, 2026

                favicon

                FediMTL (fedimtl.ca)

                cc @thisismissem@hachyderm.io @mcneely@indieweb.social

                mcneely@indieweb.socialM 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • julian@activitypub.spaceJ julian@activitypub.space

                  @rakoo@blah.rako.space completely right.

                  The "community" aspect on microblog UI is shallow at best. Instance names and domains are signalling community, but you're still screaming into a public town square about anything and everything.

                  Threadiverse absolutely does it better, but the crossover between it and the wider fediverse is minimal at best (I am posting on NodeBB right now.)

                  I'm going to be talking about this next week at FediMTL!

                  Link Preview Image
                  FediMTL - Digital Sovereignty Conference

                  A Canadian conference on digital sovereignty and the social web - February 24, 2026

                  favicon

                  FediMTL (fedimtl.ca)

                  cc @thisismissem@hachyderm.io @mcneely@indieweb.social

                  mcneely@indieweb.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
                  mcneely@indieweb.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
                  mcneely@indieweb.social
                  wrote last edited by
                  #256

                  @julian @rakoo @thisismissem I think it would be great to hear about how the experience could potentially be improved for communities. The local timeline exists but it certainly isn't prominently featured.

                  julian@activitypub.spaceJ 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • rakoo@blah.rako.spaceR rakoo@blah.rako.space
                    @McNeely @ricci @thisismissem No, it's the reddit-like: lemmy, mbin, piefed, nodebb and even discourse. Basically forums
                    mcneely@indieweb.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
                    mcneely@indieweb.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
                    mcneely@indieweb.social
                    wrote last edited by
                    #257

                    @rakoo @ricci @thisismissem thanks!

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • mcneely@indieweb.socialM mcneely@indieweb.social

                      @julian @rakoo @thisismissem I think it would be great to hear about how the experience could potentially be improved for communities. The local timeline exists but it certainly isn't prominently featured.

                      julian@activitypub.spaceJ This user is from outside of this forum
                      julian@activitypub.spaceJ This user is from outside of this forum
                      julian@activitypub.space
                      wrote last edited by
                      #258

                      Even then, the local timeline is more of a "catch-all" bucket for discussing anything, not really topic-focused.

                      Which isn't wrong, per se, just a different way of presenting content, one that loses a lot of context (context collapse, one could call it 😏 )

                      @mcneely@indieweb.social @rakoo@blah.rako.space

                      rakoo@blah.rako.spaceR 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • julian@activitypub.spaceJ julian@activitypub.space

                        Even then, the local timeline is more of a "catch-all" bucket for discussing anything, not really topic-focused.

                        Which isn't wrong, per se, just a different way of presenting content, one that loses a lot of context (context collapse, one could call it 😏 )

                        @mcneely@indieweb.social @rakoo@blah.rako.space

                        rakoo@blah.rako.spaceR This user is from outside of this forum
                        rakoo@blah.rako.spaceR This user is from outside of this forum
                        rakoo@blah.rako.space
                        wrote last edited by
                        #259
                        @julian @McNeely

                        The "timeline" model might also not be the proper tool to build a community: I don't think there's a single person who doesn't feel overwhelmed by this infinite feed of updates. Maybe a corkboard is a cool idea worth exploring
                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • rakoo@blah.rako.spaceR rakoo@blah.rako.space
                          @thisismissem @ricci

                          yes, if we're looking at mastodon and the model it has created that all microblogging apps have copied, then community doesn't really exist in the technical parts but must be artificially built up. The more interesting example is the threadiverse where communities are literal spaces: people congregate towards one or any number, they are independent from your server and from your identity. This, to me, feels closer to how communities start to create: pick an obvious topic, make obvious-y rules about what is on-topic or not to guide what people can talk about, then possibly graduate from there to another form (maybe a specific, closed community with your people). I do think more visibility should be given to the threadiverse rather than microblogging, or even mastodon, because of all the problems you have listed. And the future direction of AP should definitely split the server from the usage and build apps on the client only !
                          ricci@discuss.systemsR This user is from outside of this forum
                          ricci@discuss.systemsR This user is from outside of this forum
                          ricci@discuss.systems
                          wrote last edited by
                          #260

                          @rakoo @thisismissem

                          I think it's nuts that Masto doesn't have local-only posts, it would be the easiest thing in the world to do, it's entirely natural to the underlying data model. Good on blacksky for building it first.

                          Re: @thisismissem 's point AP not directly matching how communities form, this is the kind of thing I had in mind when I said that neither AP nor activitypub is directly modeling human interaction. But AP is closer because there are large chunks of the fediverse where it does actually fit community. The instance I'm on is one such example, the local feed is heavily slanted towards people who have interests related to me, we moderate based on our own community standards, and all that. Many of the people I interact with are on similarly-sized instances that have their own noticeable community.

                          rakoo@blah.rako.spaceR thisismissem@hachyderm.ioT 2 Replies Last reply
                          0
                          • thisismissem@hachyderm.ioT thisismissem@hachyderm.io

                            @rakoo @ricci AP as implemented places you on a server which is your identity, that server is a specific vertical of a online social presence (microblogging, images, videos, short videos, articles, forums, link aggregator)

                            The AP C2S model separates to a degree the identity from the application. You do still only have one social graph and inbox/outbox, so it's not ideal, most people have different social groups on different verticals of platforms.

                            But as long as AP is deployed in the topology and systems it is today, it does not do the "thing" that people do socially.

                            Mastodon doesn't give you a "community" just because you're on the same server (no local only posting, local feed is too noisy on larger servers), Loops arguably removes all local community thanks to algorithmic feed – I don't think they've a local feed that I've seen in press.

                            AT Protocol makes getting into social spaces in different verticals easy. Conceptually AP C2S is very similar: you have a place that is your identity + data, and then you join places with that identity (maybe customising the identity or social graph for that vertical application)

                            ricci@discuss.systemsR This user is from outside of this forum
                            ricci@discuss.systemsR This user is from outside of this forum
                            ricci@discuss.systems
                            wrote last edited by
                            #261

                            @thisismissem @rakoo

                            I'll say that the verticals are one of the aspects of atproto that I am *least* excited about. I am extremely unexcited about the idea that takedowns on my social media account could also take down my git hosting repos and my blog and my instant messaging and my ....

                            But hey, 'login with facebook' does exist, and I guess a lot of people must use it? so I guess there is some revealed preference there.

                            thisismissem@hachyderm.ioT 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • ricci@discuss.systemsR ricci@discuss.systems

                              @rakoo @thisismissem

                              I think it's nuts that Masto doesn't have local-only posts, it would be the easiest thing in the world to do, it's entirely natural to the underlying data model. Good on blacksky for building it first.

                              Re: @thisismissem 's point AP not directly matching how communities form, this is the kind of thing I had in mind when I said that neither AP nor activitypub is directly modeling human interaction. But AP is closer because there are large chunks of the fediverse where it does actually fit community. The instance I'm on is one such example, the local feed is heavily slanted towards people who have interests related to me, we moderate based on our own community standards, and all that. Many of the people I interact with are on similarly-sized instances that have their own noticeable community.

                              rakoo@blah.rako.spaceR This user is from outside of this forum
                              rakoo@blah.rako.spaceR This user is from outside of this forum
                              rakoo@blah.rako.space
                              wrote last edited by
                              #262
                              @ricci @thisismissem local-only posts is something that people have beel asking for for ages and Gargron has always fought against it. That led to the creation of the beautiful Hometown, along with a beautiful guide on how to make your own community: https://runyourown.social/ . Gargron has always said that this is not the kind of community they wanted, they want a distributed twitter. So, blacksky is only doing what others that are not mastodon have been doing for some time now
                              thisismissem@hachyderm.ioT 1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • ricci@discuss.systemsR ricci@discuss.systems

                                @rakoo @thisismissem

                                I think it's nuts that Masto doesn't have local-only posts, it would be the easiest thing in the world to do, it's entirely natural to the underlying data model. Good on blacksky for building it first.

                                Re: @thisismissem 's point AP not directly matching how communities form, this is the kind of thing I had in mind when I said that neither AP nor activitypub is directly modeling human interaction. But AP is closer because there are large chunks of the fediverse where it does actually fit community. The instance I'm on is one such example, the local feed is heavily slanted towards people who have interests related to me, we moderate based on our own community standards, and all that. Many of the people I interact with are on similarly-sized instances that have their own noticeable community.

                                thisismissem@hachyderm.ioT This user is from outside of this forum
                                thisismissem@hachyderm.ioT This user is from outside of this forum
                                thisismissem@hachyderm.io
                                wrote last edited by
                                #263

                                @ricci @rakoo are you abbreviating AP as AT Protocol? Because AP is how I (and many others) write ActivityPub β€” AT Protocol is ATP or sometimes AT (the IETF WG is ATP)

                                ricci@discuss.systemsR 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • rakoo@blah.rako.spaceR rakoo@blah.rako.space
                                  @ricci @thisismissem local-only posts is something that people have beel asking for for ages and Gargron has always fought against it. That led to the creation of the beautiful Hometown, along with a beautiful guide on how to make your own community: https://runyourown.social/ . Gargron has always said that this is not the kind of community they wanted, they want a distributed twitter. So, blacksky is only doing what others that are not mastodon have been doing for some time now
                                  thisismissem@hachyderm.ioT This user is from outside of this forum
                                  thisismissem@hachyderm.ioT This user is from outside of this forum
                                  thisismissem@hachyderm.io
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #264

                                  @rakoo @ricci now that Gargron is out of the way, I really hope @mellifluousbox and @renchap bring local-only posts to mainline Mastodon. It'd be such a huge help to moderators & server admins, it's not funny, and that's before you even get to the needs of server-local communities that you *don't* want federating.

                                  Also, custom collections support to support addressing for Groups would be fantastic. I know Jesse from Frequency already has an implementation of that on top of a mastodon codebase

                                  shellsharks@shellsharks.socialS 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • thisismissem@hachyderm.ioT thisismissem@hachyderm.io

                                    @ricci @rakoo are you abbreviating AP as AT Protocol? Because AP is how I (and many others) write ActivityPub β€” AT Protocol is ATP or sometimes AT (the IETF WG is ATP)

                                    ricci@discuss.systemsR This user is from outside of this forum
                                    ricci@discuss.systemsR This user is from outside of this forum
                                    ricci@discuss.systems
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #265

                                    @thisismissem @rakoo I'm using AP to mean ActivityPub. I was agreeing with your point that in many spaces, AP doesn't necessarily line up with community boundaries - but also pointing out that sometimes it does, and this happens much more naturally with AP than atproto

                                    thisismissem@hachyderm.ioT 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • ricci@discuss.systemsR ricci@discuss.systems

                                      @thisismissem @rakoo

                                      I'll say that the verticals are one of the aspects of atproto that I am *least* excited about. I am extremely unexcited about the idea that takedowns on my social media account could also take down my git hosting repos and my blog and my instant messaging and my ....

                                      But hey, 'login with facebook' does exist, and I guess a lot of people must use it? so I guess there is some revealed preference there.

                                      thisismissem@hachyderm.ioT This user is from outside of this forum
                                      thisismissem@hachyderm.ioT This user is from outside of this forum
                                      thisismissem@hachyderm.io
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #266

                                      @ricci @rakoo that shouldn't happen!

                                      It's a bug, at least, that's how it's described today.

                                      This is how it's envisioned to work: https://whtwnd.com/bnewbold.net/3m2j6ccx2bs2t

                                      Essentially, if you're on a bsky PDS, and you act poorly on bsky.app, as long as you've not done anything strictly illegal or network abuse, the ban should only be on bsky.app β€” though they could also tell you: hey, we don't want to host your repo/account anymore, please find another PDS host (and provide instructions and state "even though we're asking you to move, moving will not change you being banned from bsky.app"

                                      The only time your repo should be taken down is *if* you post strictly illegal content that your PDS host has liabilities for (CSAM, TVEC, etc), and bsky.app would send your PDS admin a notification informing them that bsky has detected that content on their server.

                                      ricci@discuss.systemsR 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • ricci@discuss.systemsR ricci@discuss.systems

                                        @thisismissem @rakoo I'm using AP to mean ActivityPub. I was agreeing with your point that in many spaces, AP doesn't necessarily line up with community boundaries - but also pointing out that sometimes it does, and this happens much more naturally with AP than atproto

                                        thisismissem@hachyderm.ioT This user is from outside of this forum
                                        thisismissem@hachyderm.ioT This user is from outside of this forum
                                        thisismissem@hachyderm.io
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #267

                                        @ricci @rakoo ooh, thought I should check because you said this "said that neither AP nor activitypub is directly" and M nor M doesn't really make sense. Felt like you meant "AP nor ATP" there?

                                        ricci@discuss.systemsR 1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • thisismissem@hachyderm.ioT thisismissem@hachyderm.io

                                          @ricci @rakoo that shouldn't happen!

                                          It's a bug, at least, that's how it's described today.

                                          This is how it's envisioned to work: https://whtwnd.com/bnewbold.net/3m2j6ccx2bs2t

                                          Essentially, if you're on a bsky PDS, and you act poorly on bsky.app, as long as you've not done anything strictly illegal or network abuse, the ban should only be on bsky.app β€” though they could also tell you: hey, we don't want to host your repo/account anymore, please find another PDS host (and provide instructions and state "even though we're asking you to move, moving will not change you being banned from bsky.app"

                                          The only time your repo should be taken down is *if* you post strictly illegal content that your PDS host has liabilities for (CSAM, TVEC, etc), and bsky.app would send your PDS admin a notification informing them that bsky has detected that content on their server.

                                          ricci@discuss.systemsR This user is from outside of this forum
                                          ricci@discuss.systemsR This user is from outside of this forum
                                          ricci@discuss.systems
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #268

                                          @thisismissem @rakoo I'm aware of this.

                                          It's a bug enabled by the shape of the protocol, and I have to trust that the company will not decide to make this policy in the future.

                                          And yes I can be on my own PDS (I am), but I still need to trust them to not start doing relay takedowns, because that is not something I can easily "move" from, that's up to whatever apps / appviews decide

                                          thisismissem@hachyderm.ioT 1 Reply Last reply
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