Comment on What are the practical benefits of the fediverse?
JollyTreecko@lemmy.dbzer0.com 10 months agoBut are they different websites? I’m a bit confused because I just saw a link to what looks like a lemmy instant but the url doesn’t start with a lemmy. So is it possible for someone to make a completely different website and for me to post with the same account I have now?
Say somebody makes a website with games like Kongregate or Newgrounds, could they let me post with this same account?
Carighan@lemmy.world 10 months ago
Yeah essentially.
The idea is not that the “Fediverse” - or well any specific app - is a single site broken up to run in multiple servers.
Rather it’s the inverse, it’s a lot of different little websites like lemmy.world, mastodon.social, etc etc, but you can also load any foreign thread / post / account via your own (as in, where your account is) site and then comment or vote on them. There’s a degree of interoperability - the federation - between all these various websites.
In the case of instances of the same app (say all the Lemmy servers) there’s also interoperability in the search, which importantly allows you to discover content on other servers and largely pretend it might as well be on your own.
JollyTreecko@lemmy.dbzer0.com 10 months ago
wait I can use mastodon using this account? That’s crazy, I think I’m getting it now.
odium@programming.dev 10 months ago
You won’t have all the features of mastadon with a lemmy account, but here are some things that can happen.
Mastadon users can post to lemmy and kbin communities. You can reply to these posts and both lemmy and mastadon users will be able to see it. For the mastadon users, the comments look like replies on a mastadon thread.
Mastadon users can also comment on lemmy/kbin posts. You can reply to those comments, upvote/downvote them etc.
Mastadon users can follow lemmy and kbin communities. But lemmy users can’t follow mastadon users yet. Kbin users can follow mastadon users.
noodlejetski@lemm.ee 10 months ago
it’s Mastodon.
kreynen@kbin.melroy.org 10 months ago
@JollyTreecko I am reading, up voting and commenting on this thread from https://kbin.melroy.org/m/fediverse@lemmy.world/t/99078/What-are-the-practical-benefits-of-the-fediverse
The way I quickly explain the Fediverse to technical folks is it is like public email with voting and open trigger tracking baked in. ActivityPub is the SMTP of an ecosystem of multiple domains and clients with varying policies and features.
What is happening with Threads is very similar to when AOL started making it easier for the people within their walled garden to interact with the rest of the internet.
@Blaze @Carighan
originalfrozenbanana@lemm.ee 10 months ago
The whole point is deliberate engagement and sharing. Don’t like the content coming out of an instance? Don’t federate with them. It allows communities to stay small and focused, or grow large and be a big tent, according to their users.
Neato@ttrpg.network 10 months ago
Still wish there was a way to block Instances instead of just users and communities for non-instance owners. I’d rather not switch instances for a slight inconvenience of having to block every community from an instance.
Blaze@discuss.tchncs.de 10 months ago
An example from Firefish (a Mastodon alternative): calckey.world/notes/9ojwvbyqsqpdvek2