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#streams

4 posts4 participants0 posts today
Replied in thread
@AJ Sadauskas
I mean, the Fediverse already has Lemmy, KBin, and MBin.

So there's already an ecosystem of pre-built communities out there.

/kbin is dead. Has been since last year. The last instances that haven't moved to Mbin are withering away.

However, in the "Lemmy clone" category, there's also PieFed, and Sublinks is still in development.

Also, the Facebook alternative Friendica ("Facebook alternative" not as in "Facebook clone", but as in "better than Facebook") has had groups since its launch in, 2010, five and a half years before Mastodon. Hubzilla has had groups since 2012 when it still was a Friendica fork named Red. (streams) (2021) and Forte (2024) have groups, too. All four are part of the same software family, created by the same developer. And interacting with their groups from Mastodon is somewhat smoother than interacting with a Lemmy community.

On Friendica, a group is simply another user account, but with different settings: In "Mastodon speak", it automatically boosts any DM sent to it to all its followers. In reality, it's a little more complicated because, unlike Mastodon, Friendica has a concept of threaded conversations. (No, seriously, Mastodon doesn't have it. If you think Mastodon has it, use Friendica for a year or two as your only daily driver, and then think again.)

Likewise, on Hubzilla, (streams) and Forte, it's another channel with similar settings.

CC: @myrmepropagandist @Jasper Bienvenido @sebastian büttrich @Asbestos

#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #Fediverse #FediverseGroups #Groups #PieFed #Sublinks #Friendica #Hubzilla #Streams #(streams) #Forte
joinfediverse.wikiFriendica - Join the Fediverse

Happy Friday! Today we have the second VOD for our #Kingdom playthroughs. All in all, I prefer Two Crowns, especially after returning to it years later. I wish there was more of an open sandbox version, but I'm assuming you'd just never leave the island, especially once you close the small portals.

Maybe I just like colony builders...

youtu.be/qxRQ_BGRVcE

youtu.be- YouTubeEnjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.
#Game#Games#Gaming
Replied in thread
@iFixit
and it doesn't look like you can attach documents to posts

You can't on Mastodon. I could, both here on Hubzilla and on (streams) where I post my images.

But I wouldn't have to. Vanilla Mastodon has a character limit of 500. Hubzilla has a character "limit" that's so staggeringly high that nobody knows how high it is because it doesn't matter. (streams), from the same creator and the same software family as Hubzilla, has a character "limit" of over 24,000,000 which is not an arbitrary design decision but simply the size of the database field.

By the way: Both are in the Fediverse, and both are federated with Mastodon, so Mastodon's "all media must have accurate and sufficiently detailed descriptions" rule applies there as well unless you don't care if thousands upon thousands of Mastodon users block you for not supplying image and media descriptions.

In theory, I could publish a video of ten minutes, and in the same post, I could add a full, timestamped description that takes several hours to read. Verbatim transcript of all spoken words. Detailed description of the visuals where "detailed" means "as detailed as Mastodon loves its alt-texts" as in "800 characters of alt-text or more for a close-up of a single flower in front of a blurry background" detailed. Detailed description of all camera movements and cuts. Description of non-spoken-word noises. All timestamped, probably with over a hundred timestamps for the whole description of ten minutes of video.

Now I'm wondering if that could be helpful or actually required, or if it's overkill and actually a hindrance.

CC: @masukomi @GunChleoc

#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #Mastodon #Hubzilla #Streams #(streams) #AltText #AltTextMeta #CWAltTextMeta #ImageDescription #ImageDescriptions #ImageDescriptionMeta #CWImageDescriptionMeta #MediaDescription #MediaDescriptions
joinfediverse.wikiHubzilla - Join the Fediverse
Replied in thread
@Joaquim Homrighausen @Kevin Beaumont To be fair, full data portability via ActivityPub has only been available in a stable release of anything for two weeks.

That was when @Mike Macgirvin 🖥️'s Forte, created in mid-August of 2024 as a fork of his own streams repository and the latest member of a family of software that started in 2010 with Friendica, had its very first official stable release.

And, in fact, Forte just uses ActivityPub to do something that (streams) and its predecessors all the way to the Red Matrix from 2012 (known as Hubzilla since 2015) have been doing using the Nomad protocol (formerly known as Zot). It's called nomadic identity. This is technology that's over a dozen years old on software that was built around this technology from the get-go, only that it was recently ported to ActivityPub.

Now, nomadic identity via ActivityPub was @silverpill's idea. He wanted to make his Mitra nomadic. He started working in 2023. The first conversion of existing non-nomadic server software to nomadic still isn't fully done, much less officially rolled out as a stable release.

If Mastodon actually wanted to implement nomadic identity, they would first have to wait until Mitra has a first stable nomadic release. Then they would have to wait until nomadic identity on Mitra (and between Mitra and Forte) has become stable and reliable under daily non-lab conditions. (Support for nomadic identity via ActivityPub on (streams) worked nicely under lab conditions. When it was rolled out to the release branch, and existing instances upgraded to it, it blew up in everyone's faces, and it took months for things to stabilise again.)

Then they would have to look at how silverpill has done it and how Mike has done it. Then they would have to swallow their pride and decide to adopt technology that they can't present as their own original invention because it clearly isn't. And they would have to swallow their pride again and decide against making it incompatible with Mitra, Forte and (streams) just to make these three look broken and inferior to Mastodon.

And only then they could actually start coding.

Now look at how long silverpill has been working on rebuilding Mitra into something nomadic. This takes a whole lot of modifications because the concept of identity itself has to be thrown overboard and redefined because your account will no longer be your identity and vice versa. Don't expect them to be done in a few months.

#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #Fediverse #Mastodon #Mitra #RedMatrix #Friendica #Hubzilla #Streams #(streams) #Forte #DataPortability #NomadicIdentity
Summary card of repository fortified/forte
Codeberg.orgforteNomadic fediverse server.
Replied in thread
@Kellam⚙️Бур This may come as a surprise, but: Nomadic identity is not an abstract concept or a science-fiction idea for the Fediverse.

It is reality. It exists. Right now. In stable, daily-driver software that's federated with Mastodon. And it has been for over a decade.

I'm literally replying to you here from a nomadic channel that simultaneously exists on two servers.

Nomadic identity was invented by @Mike Macgirvin 🖥️ (formerly American software developer of about half a century who has been living in rural Australia for decades now) in 2011 and first implemented in 2012. Almost four years before Mastodon was first launched.

In 2010, he had invented the Facebook alternative Friendica, originally named Mistpark and based on his own DFRN protocol.

Over the months, he witnessed lots of privately operated public Friendica nodes shut down with or without an announcement and the users on these nodes lose everything. He added the possibility to export and import Friendica accounts. But that would only help if a permanent shutdown was announced. It did not protect you against shutdowns out of the blue.

There was only one solution to this problem. And that was for someone's identity to not be bound to one server, but to exist on multiple servers simultaneously. The whole thing with everything that's attached to it. Name, settings, connections, posts, files in the file storage etc. etc., everything.

So in 2011, Mike designed a whole new protocol named Zot around this brand-new idea of what he called "nomadic identity" back then already.

In 2012, Mike forked Friendica into something called Red, later the Red Matrix, and rebuilt the whole thing from the ground up against Zot. Red was the first nomadic social networking software in the world, almost four years before Mastodon.

In 2015, ten months before Mastodon was first released, the Red Matrix became Hubzilla, the Fediverse's ultimate Swiss army knife.

I am on Hubzilla myself. This channel of mine is constantly being mirrored between its main instance on https://hub.netzgemeinde.eu and its clone on https://hub.hubzilla.de. Anything that happens on the main instance is backed up on the clone. I can also log into the clone and use that, and whatever happens there is backed up on the main instance.

https://hub.netzgemeinde.eu could go down, temporarily, permanently, doesn't matter; I still have my channel, namely the clone. And I can declare the clone my new main instance.

Well, Mike didn't stop at Hubzilla and its original version of the Zot protocol. He wanted to refine it and advance it, but in ways that wouldn't be possible on daily-driver software.

Zot went through several upgrades: Zot6 in 2018 (backported to Hubzilla in 2020, along with OpenWebAuth magic single sign-on). Zot8 in 2020. Zot11 in 2021 which had become incompatible with Zot6 and therefore was renamed to Nomad. Today's Nomad would be Zot12.

Also, in order to advance and test Zot, Mike created a whole bunch of forks and forks of forks. Osada and Zap for Zot6 in 2018, followed by another short-lived Osada in 2019. A third Osada, Mistpark 2020 (a.k.a. Misty) and Redmatrix 2020 in 2020 for Zot8. Roadhouse for Zot11 Nomad in 2021. All Osadas, Zap, Misty, Redmatrix 2020 and Roadhouse were discontinued on New Year's Eve of 2022.

The most recent software based on Nomad is from October, 2021. It can be found in the streams repository. It is officially and intentionally nameless and brandless, it has next to nodeinfo code that could submit statistics, and it is intentionally released into the public domain. The community named it (streams) after the code repository.

I also have two (streams) channels, one of which is cloned so far.

The newest thing, and that's what the Friendica and Hubzilla veteran @Tim Schlotfeldt ⚓?️‍? referred to, is nomadic identity using nothing but ActivityPub, no longer relying on a special protocol.

This was not Mike Macgirvin's idea. This came from @silverpill, the creator and developer of the microblogging server application Mitra. He wanted to make Mitra nomadic, make it resilient against server shutdown. But he didn't want to port it to Nomad. He wanted to achieve it with nothing but ActivityPub.

So he hit up Mike. The two came to the conclusion: This is actually possible. And they began to work on it. Amongst the results were several FEPs coined by silverpill.

This time, Mike did not create another fork to develop nomadic identity via ActivityPub. He did it all on the nomadic branch of the streams repository while silverpill did his part on a special development branch of Mitra.

In mid-2024, after enough sparring between (streams) instances, between Mitra instances and between (streams) and Mitra, Mike was confident enough that his implementation of support of nomadic identity via ActivityPub was stable enough. He merged the nomadic branch into the dev branch which ended up being merged into the stable release branch in summer.

Now, at this point, (streams) didn't use ActivityPub for nomadic identity. It still used the Nomad protocol for everything first and foremost, including cloning. But it understood nomadic identity via ActivityPub as implemented on experimental Mitra.

However, while it worked under lab conditions, it blew up under real-life conditions. At this point, (streams) had to handle so many different identities that it confused them, and it couldn't federate with anything yet.

In mid-August, while trying to fix the problem, Mike eventually forked the streams repository into Forte. It got a name again, it got a brand identity again, it got its nodeinfo back, it was put under the MIT license again.

But most importantly: Any and all support for Nomad was ripped out, also to get rid of a whole number of IDs, namely those for Nomad-actually-Zot12 and for Hubzilla's Nomad-actually-Zot6. Forte only uses ActivityPub for everything. And so, Forte also had to fully rely on ActivityPub for nomadic identity, cloning and syncing.

For almost seven months, Forte was considered experimental and unstable. For most of the time, the only existing servers were Mike's.

But on March 12th, 2025, Mike Macgirvin released Forte 25.3.12, the first official stable release of Forte. This is what Tim wrote about. Because this actually made it into Fediverse-wide news.

Not because it's nomadic. Nomadic identity has been daily-driven for over a decade now.

But because it uses ActivityPub for nomadic identity. Which means that you can theoretically make any kinds of Fediverse software nomadic now, all without porting it to the Nomad protocol first.

For the future, Mike and silverpill envision a Fediverse in which one can clone between different server applications. A Fediverse in which one can have one and the same identity cloned across multiple servers of Mastodon, Pixelfed, PeerTube, Mitra, Forte, Mobilizon, Lemmy, BookWyrm etc., all with the same name, all with the same content and settings (as far as the software allows; you will certainly not be able to clone your PeerTube videos to Mastodon and Lemmy).

Even if you don't intend to clone, it will make moving instances and even moving from one software to another dramatically easier.

If you're concerned about your privacy, let me tell you this:

Hubzilla's privacy, security and permissions system is unparalleled in the Fediverse. Except for that on (streams) and Forte which is another notch better.

I can define who can see my profile (my default, public profile on Hubzilla where each channel can have multiple profiles).
I can define who can see my stream and my posts when looking at my channel.
I can define who can see my connections (Hubzilla, (streams) and Forte don't distinguish between follower and followed; they aren't Twitter clones).
I can define who can look into my file space (individual permission settings per folder and per file notwithstanding).
I can define who can see my webpages on Hubzilla (if I have any).
I can define who can see my wikis on Hubzilla (no shit, I've got wikis on my Hubzilla channel).

On Hubzilla, I can define individually for any of these whether it's
  • everyone on the Internet
  • everyone with a recognisable Fediverse account
  • everyone on Hubzilla (maybe also on (streams); anyone using ActivityPub is definitely excluded here)
  • everyone on the same server as myself (AFAIK, only main instances of channels count here, clones don't)
  • unapproved (= followers) as well as approved (= mutual) connections
  • confirmed connections
  • those of my confirmed connections whom I explicitly grant that permission by contact role
  • only myself

There's a whole bunch more permissions than these. And they all have seven or eight permission levels (depending on whether the general non-Fediverse public can be given permission).

On (streams) and Forte, I can define whether things are allowed for
  • everyone on the Internet (where applicable)
  • everyone with a recognisable Fediverse account
  • all my approved connections
  • only me myself plus those whom I explicitly grant that permission in the connection settings

Yes, connection settings. Hubzilla, (streams) and Forte give you various ways of configuring individual connections, much unlike Mastodon. This includes what any individual connection is allowed to do.

Hubzilla uses so-called "contact roles" for that, presets with a whopping 17 permissions to grant or deny for any one individual connection. That is, what the channel generally allows, a contact role can't forbid.

(streams) and Forte still have 15 permissions per contact, but they lack some features which Hubzilla has permissions for. These permissions can be set individually for each connection, or you can define permission roles that cover all 15 permissions to make things easier.

Okay, how about posting in public vs in private? And when I say "private", I mean "private". It's "private messages" on Hubzilla, (streams) and Forte, not "direct messages".

Hubzilla, (streams) and Forte let you post
  • in public
  • only to yourself
  • only to your connections ((streams) and Forte only; Hubzilla requires a privacy group with all your connections in it for this)
  • to all members of one specific privacy group (Hubzilla)/access list ((streams), Forte); that's like being able to only post to those on one specific list on Mastodon
  • to everyone to whom one specific non-default profile is assigned (Hubzilla only)
  • to a specific group/forum (I'll get back to that later)
  • to a custom one-by-one selection of connections of yours

Now, let's assume I have a privacy group with Alice, Bob and Carol in it. I send a new post to only this privacy group. This means:
  • Only Alice, Bob and Carol can see the post and the conversation.
  • Alice can reply to me, Bob and Carol.
  • Bob can reply to me, Alice and Carol.
  • Carol can reply to me, Alice and Bob.
  • Nobody else can see the post. Not even by searching for it. Not by hashtag either. Not at all.
  • Nobody else can see any of the comments.
  • Nobody else can comment.

If one of them was on Mastodon, they'd see my post as a DM, by the way, and they could only reply to me. But that's Mastodon's limitation because it understands neither threaded conversations nor permissions.

Or how about reply control? This is something that many Mastodon users have been craving for quite a while now. Hubzilla, (streams) and Forte have them. Right now. And they work. They have since 2012.

Hubzilla optionally lets me disallow comments on either of my posts. Users on Hubzilla, (streams) and Forte won't even be able to comment; they won't have the UI elements to do so. Everyone else is able to comment locally. But that comment will never end up on my channel. It will never officially be added to the conversation. And at least users on Friendica, Hubzilla, (streams) and Forte will never fetch that comment from my channel as part of the conversation, i.e. never at all.

(streams) and Forte can go even further with all available options. They can disallow comments like Hubzilla. But in addition, they can allow only the members of one particular access list to comment, regardless of who can see the post/the conversation. On top of that, comments can be closed at a pre-defined point in the future. And then you even have a channel-wide setting for how long people can comment on your posts.

Oh, and there's even a setting for who is generally permitted to comment on your posts. And you can additionally allow specific connections of yours to comment on your posts.

Lastly, I've already mentioned groups/forums. Like, you know, Web forums or Facebook groups or subreddits or whatever. Like Guppe Groups on a mountain of coke and with moderation and permission control and optionally private.

Hubzilla has them, and it has inherited them from Friendica. (streams) has them. Forte has them. They're basically channels like social networking channels, but with some extra features. This includes that everything that's send to a group/forum as what amounts to a PM is automatically forwarded to all other members.

On Hubzilla, a forum can be gradually made private by denying permission to see certain elements to everyone but its own members (= connections): the profile, the members, what's going on in it. Depending on what you want or do not want people to see.

On (streams) and Forte, you have four types of forums:
  • public, and members can upload images and other files to the forum channel
  • public, but members cannot upload images and other files to the forum channel
  • like above, but additionally, posts and comments from new members must be manually approved by the admin(s) until their connections are configured to make them full members
  • private, non-members can't see the profile, non-members can't see the connections, non-members can't see what's going on in it, but members can upload images and other files to the forum channel

In addition, on all three, a group/forum channel can choose to hide itself from directories. This is always an extra option that's independent from public/private.

What we have here is the most secure and most private Fediverse software of all.

And, once again, at its core, this is technology from 2012. It pre-dates Mastodon by almost four years.

Finally, if you want to know how Hubzilla and (streams) compare to Mastodon: I have made a number of tables that compare Mastodon, Friendica, Hubzilla and (streams).

#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #Fediverse #Mastodon #Mitra #Friendica #Hubzilla #Streams #(streams) #Forte #ActivityPub #Zot #Zot6 #Zot8 #Nomad #NomadicIdentity #Security #FediverseSecurity #Privacy #FediversePrivacy #Permissions
MastodonKellam⚙️Бур (@think@m.ocsf.in)515 Posts, 10 Following, 4 Followers ·
Replied in thread
@LucileDT I don't even have an app.

As I've said, I post my images on (streams) now. There are no desktop or mobile apps for (streams). It doesn't work with Mastodon apps, it never will, and that wouldn't even make sense because they're way too different, and Mastodon apps lack UI elements for critical everyday features on (streams).

In fact, I use (streams) and Hubzilla, to which the same applies, via the built-in Web interfaces in a standard Web browser on a desktop computer running Debian GNU/Linux.

When I scroll an image into such a position that I can get as much alt-text onto the screen as possible when hovering the mouse cursor over it, I may be able to get some 2,800 characters. Something between 3,000 and 3,500 if I go full-screen. But the alt-text pop-up is entirely below the mouse cursor instead of underneath it. The scroll wheel scrolls the Hubzilla or (streams) UI. There are no scroll bars on the alt-text pop-up. And I can't move the mouse cursor over the alt-text pop-up. Moving the mouse will close the pop-up instead and re-open it below where the mouse cursor is then.

#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #Hubzilla #Streams #(streams) #AltText #AltTextMeta #CWAltTextMeta
joinfediverse.wiki(streams) - Join the Fediverse

Yep, that's me! ​:doge:

Als Sachsenkind geboren, nun lebend in Berlin, bin ich ein unerschöpflicher Quell von Chill & Relax mit einem leicht spürbaren Gaming-Skill.

Wer sich sowas antut?!

Ey, keine Ahnung! Dennoch hat sich hier im Laufe der Zeit ein Haufen netter Leute zusammengefunden, die anscheinend nichts besseres zu tun haben, als sich meine
#Streams reinzuziehen.

Kannst ja ein bisschen auf Twitch schauen ob's was für dich ist.

Musst du wissen ...
#twitch #streamer #twitchstreamer #twitch #streamer #twitchstreamer #Twitch #Twitchstreamer #Streamer #PlayTogether

Replied in thread
@Mitex Leo Short answer: no.

To my best knowledge, Hubzilla cannot import anything from Mastodon. No posts, no followed, especially no followers.

(streams) can import CSV-formatted follow lists; I don't know if Mastodon can export them, or if Mastodon has its own proprietary follow list format. But (streams) cannot make your followers on Mastodon your followers on (streams) because it cannot make people follow you. Also, (streams) cannot import posts from Mastodon.

Mass-importing 5,000+ connections from Mastodon to Hubzilla or (streams) would be a stupid idea anyway. You'd have to go through all of them and configure them. Yes, whereas Mastodon only has "I follow you" and "I don't follow you", Hubzilla and (streams) have extensive configuration options for connection. And you will need them.

You'd have to edit 5,000+ connections, one by one, and
  • assign them the appropriate contact role (Hubzilla)/permission role ((streams)) so that they have the right permissions (on Hubzilla and (streams), everything is permissions, and permissions are everything)
  • add them to one or multiple privacy groups (Hubzilla)/access lists ((streams)) (think Mastodon lists, but on lots of coke and 'roids; optional on Hubzilla, but highly recommended)
  • maybe also adjust the (optional) affinity (Hubzilla)/friend zoom ((streams)) slider
  • maybe even add lines to the (optional, but recommended) per-contact filter lists (you'll need to do this on Hubzilla to keep contacts from spamming you with boosts)

Neither Hubzilla nor (streams) is something that you can join and use away on 100% bone-stock default settings just like that.

And truth be told: If you give 5,000+ Fediverse actors full permissions to send you all their stuff, your unread activities counter (this exists, yes) will be up to "99+" every few minutes. I myself don't even have 100 active connections that are allowed to send me anything. On some of them, I filter boosts out. And yet, I get well over 100 unread activities per day that I have to catch up with.

In fact, Hubzilla and (streams) will suck even more content onto your stream than Mastodon. That's because they support threaded conversations. They don't show you single posts. They show you whole threads, including comments by people whom you don't follow and who didn't mention you.

I don't know if you follow Eugen Rochko. But if you do, imagine he posts something. 200 people reply. On Mastodon, you get Rochko's post. On Hubzilla and (streams), you get Rochko's post and 200 replies flooding onto your stream by and by.

Seriously, if you really want to move to Hubzilla (or (streams)), start over from scratch. And go slowly instead of following shit-tons of people right off the bat to have your stream abuzz like on Twitter or Facebook.

#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #Mastodon #Hubzilla #Streams #(streams)
hub.netzgemeinde.euNetzgemeinde/Hubzilla
Replied in thread

@kingconsult@berlin.social ähm Frage?

Warum ist dort bei den Vergleichen der Netzwerken, eine einzelne Fediverse Software aufgeführt und nicht das ganze Netzwerk?
Was tauchen
#GoToSocial #Misskey #Streams #Friendica #Foundkey #Glitch #Sharkey #Pixelfed als Software nicht auch mit auf?

Fragen über Fragen die euch als Kommunikationsagentur fragwürdig machen, wenn ihr Software nicht von Netzwerrk unterscheiden könnt.

@kuketz@social.tchncs.de @creativecommons@mastodon.social

Replied in thread
@Cătă @Shauna GM There are also the "descendants" of Friendica, created as forks by Friendica's own creator over more than a dozen years now, which have even more advanced permissions systems.

One is Hubzilla, a fork of Friendica from 2012. The other one is called (streams) by the community, and it's a fork of a fork of three forks of a fork (of a fork?) of Hubzilla from 2021.

I've made a series of tables that compare Mastodon, Friendica, Hubzilla and (streams) in a number of categories.

Hubzilla and (streams) give you the following possible target audiences for new posts:
  • everyone on the Internet (Hubzilla, (streams))
  • all your connections ((streams) only; on Hubzilla, you can emulate this with a privacy group containing all your connections)
  • only the members of one particular privacy group (Hubzilla)/access list ((streams)) (think "Mastodon's lists on coke and 'roids")
  • only those to whom you've assigned a specific custom profile of your channel (Hubzilla; like Friendica, it actually allows you to have multiple profiles and show them to specific connections so that they see different sides of you)
  • only one specific group/forum (Hubzilla, (streams))
  • only an impromptu selection of connections of yours (Hubzilla, (streams))
  • only you yourself (Hubzilla, (streams))

The permissions systems of Hubzilla and (streams) are compatible to one another, i.e. one understands the permissions defined by the other. I'm not sure how well they and Friendica play with each other, though.

As for Mastodon: Any post that isn't public is understood by Mastodon as a DM and treated as such. Your contacts can't boost it, for example. The downside is that this kills any chances of meaningful discussions for Mastodon users.

So Hubzilla and (streams) have this advanced permissions system, and they understand threaded conversations and treat each one of these as an enclosed object with exactly one post and any number of comments. A thread always has and enforces consistent permissions all over, including all comments.

If you're on Hubzilla, and you send a post to Alice on Hubzilla and Bob on (streams), not only do both see your post, but both also automatically receive each other's comments, and they can comment on each other's comments.

Mastodon understands your post with restricted permissions as a DM. But Mastodon DMs only ever happen between two actors. This means: If Alice and Bob are on Mastodon, then both receive your post as a DM, but neither receives any comment from the other, and they can't comment on each other's comments either.

Also, fair warning ahead:

Neither of them is "Mastodon with some extra features". They're all very different from Mastodon. They all have steeper learning curves than Mastodon. Friendica's learning curve is significantly steeper than Mastodon's. (streams)' learning curve is quite another bit steeper than Friendica's because the permissions system is not optional, and not everything is public by default. Hubzilla has an even steeper learning curve.

Also, none of the three has a full set of dedicated native mobile apps. For Friendica, there are basically only Android apps. In the Apple App Store, there's nothing. Friendica can also be used with some Mastodon apps, but they only cover maybe 20% of Friendica's features, namely those that Mastodon has, too, so you'll be very, very limited. In fact, they do not cover any permission settings.

For Hubzilla and (streams), there are no phone apps at all. They don't support Mastodon apps either, and they never will. It simply wouldn't make sense because a Mastodon app would not cover important key features.

So if you're on an iPhone or iPad, or if you want to try Hubzilla or (streams), your only option is the Web interface, either in a browser or as a Progressive Web App. At least, all three have Web interfaces that adapt to mobile devices.

Lastly, you won't find (streams) on FediDB or Fediverse Observer. It's intentionally kept away from there, and it intentionally does not submit any stats. There are currently only two public, open-registration instances anyway, one in the USA, one in Hungary with a German admin who also speaks English.

#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #Fediverse #Friendica #Hubzilla #Streams #(streams) #Facebook #FacebookAlternative
joinfediverse.wikiHubzilla - Join the Fediverse

Phew! That was a lot of #DoomII + #DoomRPG + #DRLA VODs... This is the final part of the original run. There's one more Mapset that this playthrough went through but that won't be for a bit. After this we've got some casual #Minecraft, the playthrough of #IonFury, some #StardewValley, and finally some rounds of #Kingdom before we get to that.

This was a wild playthrough, and I've honestly been itching to return to the mods now that they've been getting some updates and rebalancing and better support. It's a close second to #HideousDestructor as my favorite mod setups for Classic Doom.

youtu.be/dv2en3Kn5mY

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#Game#Games#Gaming
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@Muckz Es gibt auch noch etwas, das ganz offiziell und mit voller Absicht namen- und markenlos ist, aber von der Community (streams) genannt wird.

Das ist ein Fork eines Forks dreier Forks eines Forks (eines Forks) von Hubzilla, aber vom Erfinder von Friendica und Hubzilla. Es ist moderner und praktischer in der Handhabung als Hubzilla und liegt von der Lernkurve her zwischen Friendica und Hubzilla.

Was dabei aber zu bedenken wäre:
  • Es gibt dafür ebensowenig Smartphone-Apps wie für Hubzilla. Und es gibt ebensowenig Unterstützung für Mastodon-Apps, weil das ebensowenig sinnvoll wäre bei etwas, was so fundamental anders ist als Mastodon. Also Browser oder Progressive Web App.
  • An Verbindungsmöglichkeiten gibt's nur das hauseigene Nomad-Protokoll, das auch Hubzilla einschließt, und ActivityPub. Also nix diaspora*, nix RSS/Atom-Feeds abonnieren usw.
  • Es gibt in ganz Europa nur eine einzige Instanz mit offener Registrierung: Nomád. Serverstandort ist Ungarn, aber der Admin ist ein ausgewanderter Deutscher, @Der Pepe (nomád) ⁂ ⚝ (alias @Der Pepe (Hubzilla) ⁂ ⚝), ein Hubzilla-Veteran, der auch @Pepes Hubzilla-Sprechstunde und @PepeCyBs Welt betreibt.
  • Mit Dokumentation ist es auch noch nicht weit her. Pepe will noch eine schreiben, so, wie er die Hubzilla-Dokumentation auf Deutsch und Englisch komplett neu geschrieben hat.
  • Ähnlicher wie Facebook als Friendica mit dem Bookface-Theme ist es auch nicht.

#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #LangerPost #CWLangerPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #FacebookAlternative #Streams #(streams)
Summary card of repository streams/streams
Codeberg.orgstreamsConsent based public domain federated communications server. Provides a feature rich ActivityPub and Nomad communication node.
Man muss es ja beim Posten im Fediverse nicht übertreiben mit Formatierungen und Schnickschnack. Aber ein paar grundlegende Beitragsformatierungen gehören für mich - vor allem bei längeren Beiträgen (damit meine ich nicht 501 Zeichen, sondern mindestens 1.500+) - einfach dazu, weil sie auch die Lesbarkeit verbessern.

Und ich klatsche gerne auch kleine Banner unter manche Postings (je nach Kontext)... z.B. das Join Hubzilla Banner (mit Link zur deutschsprachigen Hubzilla-Einstiegs-Seite) oder unter die Hubzilla-Häppchen das Hubzilla-Häppchen Banner, welches per Link zu allen Häppchen-Beiträgen führt.

Friendica, Hubzilla und (streams) zeigen das auch ganz korrekt an. Die meisten anderen Dienst nicht ganz so schön. Da ist die Grafik (meist groß) vorhanden, darüber steht dann aber immerhin der Link zum jeweiligen Ziel. Nur Mastodon versaut es komplett. Da ist auch nur die zu große Grafik zu sehen... aber der Link wird unterschlagen.

Aber soll ich wegen dieser Unzulänglichkeiten z.B. auf die Banner verzichten? NÖ! Und auf Bilder? Auch NÖ!

Wer es anständig dargestellt haben möchte, muss dann halt Hubzilla, Friendica, Streams (und in Zukunft womöglich Forte) nutzen. Deshalb untendrunter auch wieder das Join-Hubzilla Banner... und für alle Mastodon-Nutzer: Der Link dahinter ist #^https://hubzilla.hu 😉

#fediverse #hubzilla #friendica #streams #mastodon

 Reverend Elvis schrieb den folgenden Beitrag Fri, 21 Feb 2025 12:02:49 +0100 4 Jahre eigene föderierte Instanzen
Ich bin ja kein Dev und kein Hacker oder Ähnliches. Ich kann Linux und etwas Serveradministration das wars. Aber ich war von Anfang an absolut fasziniert vom freien Internet. Die Leute die mich kennen, wissen, dass ich Musiker und Künstler bin und ich fand es von Anfang an fatal, dass unsere (Sub)Kulturen in die

https://word.undead-network.de/2025/02/21/4-jahre-eigene-foederierte-instanzen/
#buddypress #federation #fedi #fediverse #Mastodon #streams

4 years of my own federated instances

I'm not a developer or a hacker or anything like that. I know Linux and a bit of server administration, but that's it. But from the very beginning, I was absolutely fascinated by the free internet. People who know me know that I'm a musician and artist, and from the outset I thought it would be fatal if our (sub)cultures were to or had to be controlled by centralised platforms geared towards profit and propaganda.

More than 10 years ago (I don't remember exactly), I ran a Buddypress instance that ran on WordPress and not the federated one, so it was local, which doesn't make much sense. Then came #friendica. Super likeable to this day but hardly usable back then. The people behind it really fought their way through the jungle, you should honour that. Without friendica no Mastodon and all that. Real pioneers.

Then came Diaspora* I am still there today and really like this community. Everyone is a bit older, likes to write long texts and thinks before they say something. I always get a slap on the wrist there ;) for me they are real authorities there. I appreciate that very much.
Then Mastodon came from my neighbouring city (well, almost ;) ) the city of Jena, and that took everything to a completely new level as we know it today. Great achievement. Like everyone else, I started on mastodon.social and then, according to #Fediverse Observer, started my own instance four years ago. I don't remember if that's true. I've rebuilt it so many times now and tried to learn.
#Yunohost and #Framasoft are also important to me. Today, we are once again seeing centralisation efforts. Everything should have an order. Chaos scares people. I love chaos. That's the only place where something can emerge. I'm currently watching (#streams). Perhaps an alternative to the huge projects? It remains exciting.
word.undead-network.de/2025/02
#buddypress #federation #fedi #fediverse #Mastodon #streams

4 Jahre eigene föderierte Instanzen
Ich bin ja kein Dev und kein Hacker oder Ähnliches. Ich kann Linux und etwas Serveradministration das wars. Aber ich war von Anfang an absolut fasziniert vom freien Internet. Die Leute die mich kennen, wissen, dass ich Musiker und Künstler bin und ich fand es von Anfang an fatal, dass unsere (Sub)Kulturen in die Fänge zentralistischer auf Gewinn und Propaganda ausgerichteten Plattforemen stattfinden sollen oder müssen.

Ich habe schon vor weit über 10 Jahren (genau weiß ich es nicht mehr) eine Buddypress Instanz betrieben, die auf WordPress läuft und die föderierte nicht, war also lokal, was ja wenig Sinn ergibt. Dann kam #friendica. Super sympathisch bis heute aber damals kaum benutzbar. Die Leute dahinter haben sich echt durchs Dickicht gekämpft, man sollte die ehren. Ohne friendica kein Mastodon und all das. Echte Pioniere. Dann kam Diaspora* bin ich bis heute und mag diese Community dort sehr. Alle etwas älter, schreiben gern lange Texte und denken nach, bevor sie etwas sagen. Da bekomme ich immer mal eins auf den Deckel ;) für mich sind das echte Autoritäten dort. Ich schätze das sehr.

Dann kam aus meiner Nachbarstadt (naja fast ;) ) Jena, Mastodon und das hob alles auf ein vollkommen neues Niveau wie wir es heute kennen. Riesen Leistung. Hab, wie alle, auf mastodon.social angefangen und laut #Fediverse Observer dann vor 4 Jahren meine eigene Instanz gestartet. Ob das stimmt, weiß ich nicht mehr. Ich hab die inzwischen so oft neu gemacht und versucht zu lernen. 

Auch #Yunohost und #Framasoft sind wichtig für mich. Heute sieht man wieder Zentralisierungsbemühungen. Alles soll eine Ordnung bekommen. Das Chaos macht den Menschen Angst. Ich liebe das Chaos. Nur da kann was entstehen. Ich schaue mir gerade (#streams) an. Vielleicht eine Alternative zu den riesigen Projekten? Es bleibt spannend.

word.undead-network.de/2025/02
#buddypress #federation #fedi #fediverse #Mastodon #streams