I have a friend who is most of the way done making an open source app that handles supply chain interactions without centralization. It uses a SSB backend so there aren’t any central servers and it’s not crypto. There’s no angle for him to get rich doing this, it’s just a good idea that he wants to exist in the world. Written in Clojure.
Recorded today on a IC-9700 located in Leeds by G7DCT. Turned the audio into a short 'educational' video for those who never get the chance to see/hear the Aurora. Brings back so many memories of when I was first licensed in the UK. Can't wait to move back to Yorkshire and get another station built out ready for the peak of this cycle!
HNY! This evening, just before 4pm PST, we will be on the air doing #SOTA for the New Year UTC rollover. With W7MTB and N7OLE, please work all of us. After 4pm we'll be sharing the station working #SSB and passing the mic around until we are too cold. Hope to get y'all in the log!
> See, because you need an always-on computer in order to really reliably use #decentralized social media
Bruh. #Usenet, #Fidonet and #UUCP (#UUCPnet) beg to differ (no reason you couldn't use #NNCP for Usenet now if #NNTP isn't your thing).
Is there anything in #ActivityPub that prevents mass surveillance? seems like (most) meta data is shared openly between federated nodes, wouldn't be hard to info mine or index the fediverse, especially if you're a giant corporation or modern intelligence agency.
So are #SSB, #NNTP and #ActivityPub the main #social protocols to keep an eye on right now or are others also pretty active and/or with interesting features?
When there's only one implementation it tends towards a platform (or in the case of a distributed exchange, it WANTS to be the platform).
When there's multiple stable implementations... It can tend to stay a protocol
Even things like #ssb (manyverse) or #radicle (distributed git) go through periods where the spec gets such a huge overhaul that the single reference client isn't usable.
Vs having a normal http server mode, compatible with a browser.
Matrix straddles the line.... It still does unhealthy stuff for the potential survival or expansion of the protocol and clients I can't fit into the simple heuristic.
#Nostr feels like the dev didn't understand #SecureScuttlebutt and tried to "fix" it anyway.
He didn't get the chaining of messages and why peer to peer was worth the hassle, so all the metadata are left in the open (who speaks to whom, and even the message length), you have to use the same relay to speak to someone…
And all the hard problems that took years of discussing them before being implemented in #ssb, nostr people are like "we'll just throw bitcoin at it and it will solve everything". 🙃
Manyverse isn't part of the Fediverse, because it works very differently. It's part of the SSB (aka Scuttlebutt) network, and is trying to make SSB more user friendly.
However, the aim of Manyverse/SSB is very similar to the Fediverse: to decentralise social media. You may want to try it out!
Manyverse have just released their first desktop apps, so Manyverse is now available for all major platforms (Linux, Mac, Windows, Android, iOS). You can find out more and download the apps at:
I've previously posted that Manyverse is serverless, but this isn't quite true. It can be very difficult to reliably connect internet users peer-to-peer, so Manyverse uses special servers called "Rooms" to connect users. However, actual user data is not stored online, so data storage is still serverless. There's a video explaining Room servers at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W5p0y_MWwDE