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Bandwagon is Emissary’s Bandcamp Alternative


For Fediverse musicians looking for a new Bandcamp alternative, Bandwagon feels extremely promising. It's built on top of the Emissary platform, and offers a robust amount of features for playing, promoting, and discovering music.


sub.club Emerges to Offer Paid Fediverse Subscriptions


sub.club is an emergent new platform for paid subscriptions in the #Fediverse. It's simple, smooth, and easy to use.
in reply to silverpill

Probably because, to my knowledge:

  1. I didn't know that Mitra did that.
  2. Even though it does have that functionality, I have no idea whether it would work with the rest of the network.
  3. This article was about sub.club

I'm not trying to slight Mitra in any way, shape, or form, but my focus for this article was scoped to one thing in particular.

in reply to Sean Tilley

@fediverse You cite an abandoned project and withdrawn WebMonetization FEP and then say "most efforts have not advanced beyond the planning stages". This statement is misleading because those planning stages are far behind us. Mitra had subscriptions since 2022 and there are other projects that provide monetization options, like PeerTube Lightning plugin and PeerTube Premium Users plugin. FEP-0ea0 and FEP-0837 were published and implemented. Your co-author @quillmatiq should be well aware of these developments because we talked about it
in reply to silverpill

I'm not a co-author of this article. I contribute to WD but did not contribute to this article as it would be a conflict of interest irt my relationship with the project.

Share your info with kindness instead of anger. We're all trying to educate and build together, and good-faith conversations go a lot further than assuming the worst of everyone.

Sean has never written a piece with the intent to erase history, and he works incredibly hard to keep things accurate.

This entry was edited (1 year ago)
in reply to Anuj Ahooja

wedistribute.org/2024/03/activ…

In another article @deadsuperhero talked about nomadic identity and Mike Macgirvin's efforts to implement it in ActivityPub, but similarly failed to mention another project that implements it (Mitra) and the person who wrote the spec (me).

At least my work was mentioned in a footnote. In the current article it is completely ignored.

@deadsuperhero @fediverse

This entry was edited (1 year ago)
in reply to silverpill

Dude, listen. I am one person running a volunteer news project for free. I try my best to stay on top of researching the space, but there's no reasonable way for me to catch everything. I've written 200+ articles at this point, but due to a combination of factors, I struggle to get more than one article out per week at times. I regularly juggle a backlog of 40+ drafts at any given moment. Add a dash of burnout and fatigue, and you'll start to get a clearer picture: it's hard to keep up, and only getting harder.

There's no way for me to reasonably catch everything. Mitra's a cool project and all, but it's tiny enough that I've heard relatively little about it. There are dozens of projects out there at this point, and new ones everyday. If you're not advertising the thing you're building and what it does, there's a high chance I might miss it.

I keep an eye on the FEP developments from time to time, and I applaud all you've accomplished with that. However, the existence of a spec does not necessarily mean that platforms out there are necessarily implementing each and every one of them.

in reply to Sean Tilley

@fediverse FEP-ef61 is what Mike was implementing and rolled out in production this summer. It's not like we didn't advertise that. All work on this FEP (and ones that precede it) was done in public channels, it's really hard to miss if you're interested in nomadic identity.

Give @weekinfediverse a follow. It provides a concise summary of what is happening in Fediverse

in reply to silverpill

Most efforts haven't moved beyond the planning stages. Just because you can point to a plugin or a FEP spec doesn't mean that it's an ongoing active effort for bring a payment layer to the Fediverse, with a consumer-facing tool or platform. I'm sorry if I didn't catch that Mitra had some of that functionality, but I would also push back and say that the average person is not going to use Monero for payments on the Web anytime soon.

Those PeerTube plugins are nice, and the Premium Users one was actually something I pointed @quillmatiq@mastodon.social to for sub.club, as an example of prior art. They're interesting experiments, possibly useful integrations, but not in and of themselves actual platforms to build infrastructure and solutions on.

in reply to Sean Tilley

@fediverse Protocols described in these FEPs are currency-agnostic and developers can build actual platforms and solutions on them (as I did). This is the only ongoing effort to bring a payment layer to the Fediverse - there are no alternative proposals. FEP-8c3f was withdrawn in favor of FEP-0ea0.

Okay, you didn't know about it. But now you do and it would be nice to include at least some of that information in the article.



sub.club Emerges to Offer Paid Fediverse Subscriptions


sub.club is an emergent new platform for paid subscriptions in the #Fediverse. It's simple, smooth, and easy to use.
Unknown parent

mbin - Link to source
aasatru

A lot of people use Mastodon as an RSS feed where they can leave comments. This would basically allow you to subscribe to the content of a writer, and get it full-form straight in your feed.

I could also imagine following artists on Pixelfed, throwing money in their tip jar to keep posted on their newest creations.

I think there's a lot of potential here. But monetisation is always tricky on the internet, of course.



Samba Secures A Big Investment From Germany's Sovereign Tech Fund - Phoronix


reshared this

in reply to Possibly linux

Fot those who doesnt know, Samba is Linux's implementation of the SMB Protocol, which lets you network share with password protection. This allows easy file transfers between Linux and Windows computers on the same network
in reply to CaptainBasculin

Thanks, that's awesome.

It's great to see Linux projects getting some funding.

in reply to CaptainBasculin

It can run as a domain controller in active directory as well (2016 functional level now supported)
This entry was edited (1 year ago)
in reply to Possibly linux

Can confirm that it can do this fairly well.

Source: the time I grabbed a machine we were about to toss and made it a secondary domain controller for our site so we could nuke and pave our misbehaving Server 2012 DC.

(That other one was also a secondary DC - we just needed one on-site so we could prevent our T1 connection to another site from being the bottleneck.)

in reply to Possibly linux

Huh, didn’t even know my country had a sovereign tech fund. Looking more into it … yeah. It gets money from the federal government but it is in no way run or even associated with it. Looks like a GmbH is behind it, which is a for profit company in Germany. It has a volume of 17 million €.

Also its name is literally sovereign tech fund, even in German, I.e. that’s not a translation, that’s its literal name. I wouldn’t say it’s sketchy, the people behind it definitely look legit, but it certainly doesn’t quite meet the lofty associations the name suggests.

in reply to Sbauer

They gave a bunch of money to FreeBSD, so I like them
in reply to Sbauer

SPRIND GmbH is also known as „Bundesagentur für Sprunginnovationen“ and owned by the Federal Republic of Germany. See de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bundesag… and sprind.org


This entry was edited (1 year ago)
in reply to Soatok

Dense technical analysis about implementing post quantum cryptography into distributed social networks coupled with cartoon images of furries showing various emotions.

This is the essence of The Fediverse.

My name is Blort™ and I approve this message.


in reply to EasilyForgotten

How long til they can get a Rust Kernel committee to really decelerate progress?

But seriously, great to see progress keep chugging.

in reply to EasilyForgotten

i was trying to run minecraft on that os (spoiler it didnt work and idk if this is releated) but the install was quite fast and i was using openjdk
This entry was edited (1 year ago)


Newly added documentary on VideoNeat.com:

Hell Jumper

Courage, love and loss. Young people risk their lives with self-funded missions to rescue families in Ukraine’s frontline towns. Told through their own words and unique first-person footage.

Watch it here:

videoneat.com/documentaries/26…

This entry was edited (1 year ago)

TROM reshared this.


in reply to John

The attention to detail in Libadwaita is pretty great
in reply to John

At long last, some theming support for Adwaita! I really missed being able to change colors, at the very least


Åtal mot Flashbacks ägare. Ägaren har åtalats för hets mot folkgrupp för att han inte hållit rent bland kommentarerna på diskussionsforat. Han som heter Jan Axelsson har underlåtit att ta bort inläggen som är att betrakta som hets mot folkgrupp.

blog.zaramis.se/2024/09/13/ata…


in reply to John

I don't understand what is the point of this.
Isn't it the job of the WM to position windows and stuff?
Apps have to do it themself now?
in reply to simonced

How can a window manager position things if the program doesn't communicate with it correctly?
in reply to Norah (pup/it/she)

I used to do apps with QT (as well as with Java) and when creating a window, I only needed to say, "new window of that preferred size please", then the engine would make the window of that size if possible.
Now, maybe QT did things more in depth behind the scene, I don't know.
in reply to simonced

I kind of think that's QTs whole deal right? An abstraction layer that allows for devs to not get stuck in the weeds implementing it all manually.
in reply to simonced

If Qt or Java is doing it, then that's still your program and not the WM, though?
in reply to Kazumara

In those cases, I agree.
But for a tiling window manager like w3m, I don't see the application having a say in position and location.
Hence I didn't think that the app has so much to do with creating windows. Just my thought.
in reply to simonced

This is about dragging a tab out of or into a browser window, and letting the compositor know about it, so it can move and place the window accordingly. Apps don't get to place windows themselves.
Unknown parent




Die Fediverse Files sind eine fantastische Videoserie über das Fediverse, und ich bin stolz, Teil davon zu sein! @docpop bringt mit seinem einzigartigen Stil eine perfekte Mischung aus Information und Popkultur in jede Folge. Auch der Cast ist hervorragend, und ich schätze @docpop, @evan und @bart sowie ihre Arbeit für das Fediverse sehr.

Es freut mich besonders, dass WordPress.com/Automattic und @docpop zusammengefunden haben!

Genug der Lobhudelei!

Ich kann jedem, der die Fediverse Files bisher noch nicht gesehen hat, nur ans Herz legen, dies umgehend nach zu holen! Viel Spaß beim Binge Watching 🍿

youtube.com/watch?v=QzYozbNneV…

Weiterlesen: The Fediverse Files

youtube.com/watch?v=nLqwKph7Sx…

youtube.com/watch?v=1JKszCKZxq…

youtube.com/watch?v=3DhK8uSKId…

youtube.com/watch?v=t4pmWufYRr…



Thor Fisheries P/f i är ett färöiskt fiskeriföretag som ägs av ett företag, Thor P/f som sysslar med offshoreverksamhet, dvs underhåll av oljeplattforrmar i Nordsjön och liknande. Thor P/f ägs av Hans Andrias Frímann Kelduberg (55%), Gunnbjørn Joensen (25% via personligt holdingbolag) och Per Lund Gulklett (15%).

fiske.zaramis.se/2024/09/13/th…



Flera personer åtalade för våld kopplat till Foxtrotnätverket. Åklagare har väckt åtal mot nio personer för en rad grova våldsbrott som kopplas till nätverket Foxtrots konflikter med andra kriminella nätverk i Stockholmsområdet. Många av de åtalade i detta ärenden tog sen ställning för Ismail Abdo i den interna konflikten inom Foxtrotnätverket.

blog.zaramis.se/2024/09/13/fle…



Fedora 42 On 64-bit ARM Might Make It Seamless To Run x86/x86_64 Programs


reshared this

in reply to petsoi

We can already run arm seamlessly on x86 Linux, why not use Qemu-user + binfmt misc the other way around? I guess FEX must be much faster. Im also not super keen to run binaries that can't be recompiled anyway so probably not the target audience.

Take that Java, everything is a portable binary now.

in reply to mvirts

Until you try to run Android app without Android :)

But I got the point.

in reply to lnxtx (xe/xem/xyr)

I hate Java with the white hot passion of a thousand suns. It is baked into so many admin tools for hardware (Dell, Cisco, etc) and trying to connect to older hardware that requires a security model that isn’t supported anymore or has expired certs that are never getting updated is a giant pain in the ass. Run anywhere my ass. I have to keep special VMs with just the right version of Java and all the necessary tweaks (like having to tell it that certain older encryption methods are ok) to even access some of these tools. I’ve even had to surplus hardware that was perfectly fine accept for the fact I could configure it because of some stupid Java thing. In short Fuck Java with a rusty wire brush.

I’m not bitter at all 🤣



Regeringen inför ett nytt bidrag till gängkriminella. Sverige behöver arbetskraft då det finns brist på arbetskraft. Då vill regeringen att människor som finns i Sverige ska lämna landet. De genomför en utredning som säger att bidrag till folk för att lämna landet är en dålig idé. Regeringen skiter i utredningen och inför ett bidrag på 350 000 per person för att lämna landet.

blog.zaramis.se/2024/09/13/reg…

This entry was edited (1 year ago)


An evidence-based and critical analysis of the Fediverse decentralization promises


Lemmy mentioned\( °□° )/
in reply to morrowind

They define decentralisation as an even distribution of users? Or did I get that wrong skimming the paper?

This seems arbitrary. Mastodon is a decentralised network, no matter how big Mastodon.social is. Lemmy is equally decentralised, even though there's a dominant actor.

The other hubs in the network don't revolve around mastodon.social/lemmy.world. they connect to each other bilaterally - if the central hubs disappeared over night it wouldn't affect them all that much.

I think the notion that decentralised networks can't have hubs of varying sizes is plain wrong, and a fundamental misunderstanding of what decentralized means.

in reply to morrowind

I don't care if 99% of users are on once instance as long as people have the option to create their own instances and build on tech software and content created by the community.
This entry was edited (1 year ago)


LibreOffice 24.8.1, released, fixes 89 bugs


In numbers, the LibreOffice 24.8.1 point release addresses a total of 89 bugs. Details about these bugs are available in the RC1 and RC2 changelogs. The new release is available for download right from the official website as binaries for DEB and RPM-based GNU/Linux distributions.
This entry was edited (1 year ago)

reshared this

in reply to grandel

That's what I always say at work, if we just stopped working on the product thered be no more bugs


Polismyndighetens nationella operativa avdelning, Noa, har identifierat runt 600 gängkriminella svenskar i utlandet som bedriver organiserad brottslig verksamhet riktad mot Sverige. De befinner sig i 57 olika länder över hela världen.

blog.zaramis.se/2024/09/12/600…


in reply to andypiper

I think this is a great thing, but it will be massively criticized and shot down by the "Mah privacy" crowd. There is no way to avoid a competing implementation that will ignore privacy requests, and the moment someone finds out their content is out of their home instance, they will come with the pitchforks the same way they came after the bridgy developer.
This entry was edited (1 year ago)
in reply to rglullis

I hated the backlash the bridgy dev received. His project was genuinely useful, helped to solve one of people's most common criticisms of the fediverse. And after he was browbeat into giving it up, everything still got hoovered up by bots and fed into AI models anyway.
in reply to drone509

Yeah, the pitchfork crowd manages to shut down everyone who tries to do something genuinely good for the community, while leaving all the bad actors running wild in the background.

I mean, we always knew loud voices in the open source community were toxic as fuck - that's obvious enough from the Linux mailing list. Giving these people their own social network to ruin was wildly optimistic from the beginning. It's a wonder it hasn't gone worse.

It's amazing how computer nerds posting on the fucking fediverse can be so sceptical of seeing their content leave the platform they're currently on. Like that's not the whole goddamn point of posting here in the first place.

Also, Bridgy.fed rules. Anyone out there on Mastodon or Bluesky: Please opt in! :)

in reply to aasatru

It’s amazing how computer nerds posting on the fucking fediverse can be so sceptical of seeing their content leave the platform they’re currently on. Like that’s not the whole goddamn point of posting here in the first place.


It was more about the unability to defederate if necessary (e.g. conspiracists or crypto bros becoming the majority users here), and the bridge not being opt-in at the beginning.

in reply to Blaze (he/him)

I understand those concerns, but I'm not sure if this really improved the security of mastodon, an inherently very insecure software, and it definitely deprived us of a useful tool. Defederation works at stopping spam, but I don't think it really helps much when it comes to preventing people from seeing things you post. It stops a single server, but bad actors can just migrate to a new one, or spin up a new hostname.
in reply to drone509

but bad actors can just migrate to a new one, or spin up a new hostname.


Then you defederate from it too. I just went through some instances list, some servers have been defederating Mastodon instances like crazy

in reply to Blaze (he/him)

Then you defederate from it too.


Okay, let me create an account on mastodon.social and use it to scrape content from every other instance.

Better yet, let me create an account on "i-want-privacy-in-a-public-internet.example.com" and access the federated timeline directly, then I can go and push the content from everyone into this discovery service.

What are they going to do? Unless they go to the point of asking for physical evidence behind the person asking for accounts and/or only give invitations to people they already know, and completely shut down their own servers to the outside world*, they will **never be able to avoid data leakage.

And if they do get to do any of this, then what is the point of using anything based on ActivityPub? They will be better off by just using any of the existing group chat servers like Discord (or Matrix/XMPP if they still care about FOSS.)

in reply to rglullis

The point we were discussing was not data leakage, it was the inability to defederate from a huge instance which would overflow the number of users, similar to the way people imagined what would happen if Threads federated, and Lemmy is suddenly overflown with people usually on Facebook.

It's not a bad thing per se (anyone can make their own opinion), but not having even the option to defederate is the issue.

This entry was edited (1 year ago)
in reply to Blaze (he/him)

No, admins might think of defederation as a way to avoid interaction with larger instances, but in the case of the bridge it was mostly regular users crying "I don't my content going in a place that I do not control", with "lack of opt-in" and "this violates GDPR" being the main reasons cited to be against it.

With Threads is the same thing. The whole thing with users asking their admins to block threads is not because they were worried about Threads pushing too much to the smaller instances, but to block Threads from mining data from the Fediverse to their profit.

in reply to rglullis

I wouldn't be so sure, a lot of people pointed out that the privacy argument wasn't one as everything is accessible publicly.
in reply to Blaze (he/him)

Yeah, lots of people were trying to point that out, those people were not the ones screaming at snarfed. It was the "mah privacy" crowd that was panicking at the thought of data being available and searchable in a server outside of their own.
in reply to rglullis

I think what you are talking about is instances that may have a large population of marginalized groups, and the fear that someone is creating a database that could be used to easily seek them out and use it for trolling and such. Which I think is a very valid concern.

And as mentioned above, you have the crowd that wants to take an instance and give all their posts over to for-profit corporations like Threads and Bluesky, that should not even be called part of the fediverse IMHO.

I don't know how you make a global search for the fediverse that avoids both of those issues though.

in reply to TimLovesTech

marginalized groups, and the fear that someone is creating a database that could be used to easily seek them out and use it for trolling and such.


The fear might be justified. I don't question that the issue exists, but the belief that they can stop it.

Let me repeat: there is no real privacy in any social network. If people are genuinely afraid of being targeted because of what they write online, the solution is not to give them a false sense of privacy, but to educate and empower them to use messaging platforms that are provably secure.

Those that are telling marginalized folks to use instance XYZ because "they don't federate with threads and therefore are safe" think that they are being helpful, but in reality are putting them at even more risk because they are telling all of them to concentrate in the same place and make the targeted tracking even easier for malicious actors.

This entry was edited (1 year ago)
in reply to rglullis

in reply to drone509

The Bridgy Fed dev didn't get browbeaten into anything, he thinks the opt-in approach is better (and I agree). And he's also said the backlash was probably deserved.