However, they tend to be a little messy and not easily skimmable. I also wanted to focus on Fediverse alternatives to existing services, although I do like the idea of going on beyond what is offered by current social media.
So, inspired by this discussion (and others), I thought a curated list of the main alternatives (with beginner-friendly sites) might be handy (especially with a potential influx of new users):
Matrix - not as interconnected as the core ActivityPub services but it integrates well with Lemmy to provide secure DMs (just add your Matrix ID into your Lemmy profile)
Media hosting (Flickr, YouTube, SoundCloud, DeviantArt):
MediaGoblin - are there public instances you can join?
When Google+ shut,.I moved to diaspora and didn't do very much with it.
When the great Twitter exodus happened, I signed up to Mastodon and didn't get this federated business so wandered off.
Now with the API apocalypse at Reddit, I am here and I get it. It now all makes sense to me and I've been seeing how federated I can get, which is the background to ye research that went into the initial post. And the answer is "pretty federated" as everything is playing nicely with each other. In fact, I am feeling borderline evangelical as this feels like the Internet I've been waiting for since the late 80s/early 90. So let's skip Web 3.0 and move on to 4.0 where everything is federated!
Me too. When I first looked at Mastodon I was like “oh those addresses are weird that will never work” for some lame, resistant to change reason. Now I’m like “bring on the alphabet soup links and whatever quirks I don’t care, the fediverse is awesome!.”
Me too. And I was all "there are different servers with different groups on them? Like that's going to work!" But it does. In fact, it can be seen as a strength.
Yeah, diaspora, that’s a name I haven’t heard in a very long time. I tried it and got nowhere because nobody else I knew was ever going to go there and making friends is already a Herculean enough task for me as it is