| ▲ | danabramov 5 hours ago | |||||||
ActivityPub and atproto are differently shaped. Pitting them against each other is like asking “why need web when we have email”. ActivityPub is email-shaped. Servers are inboxes sending messages to each other. atproto is web-shaped. User repositories host data (like personal sites or git/RSS), while apps aggregate from repositories (like Google Reader). Different topologies lead to different properties. Eg atproto lets user change hosting with no disruption in app experience. atproto also lets anyone build new apps aggregating over existing data. ActivityPub doesn’t allow either of those things. It’s literally a bunch of small centralized coupled hosting+app services messaging each other. | ||||||||
| ▲ | class4behavior 4 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
Calling AP services a bunch of small "centralized" services in this context removes all the meaning from that term. You might as well call any web server centralized while comparing them to clouds. Proper federation is exactly such bunch of small services messaging each other. On the hand, what ATProto leads to is at most a handful of large-scale providers each running the own portion of the network. | ||||||||
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| ▲ | pasto421 an hour ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
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