I don't really understand this image to be honest. There's a lot of technology on it that is not even related with the Fediverse. What exactly am I missing here?
The big tree is the Fediverse, i.e. all the services that support ActivityPub. The little trees are other protocols for federated social networks (which were developed before ActivityPub) or messaging (Matrix, XMPP). The dotted lines show which services support those alternative protocols in addition to ActivityPub. However, I agree that the diagram is a little bit confusing.
This diagram is a bit more concise, but it only shows a selection of Fediverse services, not all.
Woah, that's way bigger than I thought it was. It's pretty incredible that there is a portion of the 'internet' that is inter-connected.
Information and protocols that can freely move between platform and be freely referenced, all of which is not governed by large organizations but by people...spreading out the power and responsibility among the masses!
Sorry I went a bit poetic there; I can't help but wonder, isn't this what the internet was designed to be?!
@Izzgo@squirrel Yes, you can. Right now I'm writing from Mastodon and I can give upvotes, create posts, follow users and communities.
Not only I can interact with Lemmy/Kbin I also can do it with PixelFeed and PeerTube. I've done it with the last two a couple of times. In the case of Lemmy/Kbin I do it daily.
As in you are using your Mastodon-Account, or as in you are using a Mastodon-Client to browse Lemmy Communities? If it's the later one, I'm curious how this thread or a Video on PeerTube looks like on a Mastodon-Client. Do you mind sharing a screenshot?
More or less. The site owners have some discretion about which instances they federate (that is, exchange content feeds) with, so you may not get absolutely everything. And some of the connections seem more reliable than others - I've found that the Lemmy sites reliably share posts and comments with each other, and they seem to receive the stuff from kbin, but I've noticed some comments on Lemmy don't seem to show up on kbin.
Nextcloud and WordPress really shouldn't be considered part of the Fediverse. They have ActivityPub plugins, but they're not actually part of the Fediverse otherwise.
EDIT: I stand corrected. Nextcloud is absolutely a member of the Fediverse.
However, you are correct. Nextcloud now has federated filesharing built in. It requires the server to be Internet-facing and to have a domain name. According to the documentation, federated shares have to be created manually in a process resembling sharing files in Google Drive.
I stand corrected. Nextcloud has enough federation integrated for me to consider it a part of the Fediverse.
I like kbin. I don't really know how to navigate it though. I subbed to a cat mag and now I get cool pictures. And I joined redditmigration but I might leave because fuck reddit
I see so much integration potential here. Want to post a video? It posts to a local PeerTube instance and embeds the video in the Mastadon post. Use Drupal to organize files in a local NextCloud instance for sharing on Lemmy. Use Mobilizion to set up community events in Kbin.
Is there a way to bring them all together? Even within one service, like Mastodon or Lemmy, my experience is that you eventually hit the wall of "oh that topic is on another instance" and you can't simply get all the topics you want to follow in one feed. Federated means "held together," or "unified," right? But I must be using it wrong or missing something huge because the end experience seems mainly characterized by fragmentation.
That's the fun part. You can subscribe to the content on another instance from your "home" instance. Right now I'm subscribed to feeds from possumpat.io, lemmy.ml, and more, and they all show up in my feed on my kbin.social home page. Even this post is on feddit.de, and I'm using my kbin account to reply.
They're already connected. It looks like you posted this comment on kbin, but I'm reading and replying on a Lemmy instance because I have subscribed to some kbin communities (or magazines) from this Lemmy instance. And you can do the same in reverse, subscribing to Lemmy communities from kbin.
I do find the connection between kbin and Lemmy instances seems a bit unpredictable compared to the connections between different Lemmy instances. Sometimes comments show up on kbin but not Lemmy, and sometimes the other way round. Maybe the synchronization is just slower and they'll show up eventually.
I feel a big advantage to NOT bringing them all together into one service is multiple leadership groups, so that if one becomes fascist it's easy for people to simply move to another. Certainly as a long time redditor when reddit started its fascist garbage I kinda freaked out. I didn't know where to go to get my "fix". Now I still get the variety (and more every day), and if the devs for my primary group get power hungry I know some options.