Richard MacManus
@ricmac.mastodon.social.ap.brid.gy
230 followers 2 following 1.1K posts
Founder of ReadWriteWeb (2003–2012). Now publishing Web Technology News, a weekly briefing on the Web’s future: infrastructure, open networks, AI → […] 🌉 bridged from ⁂ https://mastodon.social/@ricmac, follow @ap.brid.gy to interact
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ricmac.mastodon.social.ap.brid.gy
In this week's Web Technology News, I unveil a new and improved format. I've added a "WTN Note" to many of the news items, so that this becomes more of a business and strategy briefing than just a list of interesting links. The 3 categories are now:

1. Web Platform Opportunities
2. Open Social […]
Original post on mastodon.social
mastodon.social
Reposted by Richard MacManus
Reposted by Richard MacManus
reiver.mastodon.social.ap.brid.gy
1/

Here are my slides from my FediForum demo of CrowdBucks.

#crowdbucks #fediforum
FediForum Demo

CrowdBucks

https://crowdbucks.fund
https://crowdbucks.org

@crowdbucks@mastodon.social
ricmac.mastodon.social.ap.brid.gy
Just downloaded this app, presented at #fediforum today by @jesseplusplus. Photo sharing without the bigco algorithms!
https://frequency.app/@frequency/115327818938811236
Reposted by Richard MacManus
classicweb.site
One thing I miss about web designs from 25 years ago is the columns... in the mobile era, columns went extinct.
saimasays.com in 2001
https://web.archive.org/web/20011120010402if_/http://saimasays.com:80
Screenshot of saimasays.com in 2001
ricmac.mastodon.social.ap.brid.gy
My take on OpenAI's new Apps SDK, an app platform reminiscent of the big iOS & Android announcements of 2008 (but now it's web apps!):

"Today, ChatGPT has a gravitational pull similar to Apple and Google in 2008. [...] Yet in a curious inversion of history, OpenAI has flipped the paradigm: the […]
Original post on mastodon.social
mastodon.social
ricmac.mastodon.social.ap.brid.gy
Let's take a trip back to the year 2000, 25 long internet years ago. A year in which Flash websites proliferate, blogging expands, social news sites like Slashdot gain influence — all of this while the dot-com bubble slowly deflates and Napster dominates headlines […]
Original post on mastodon.social
mastodon.social
ricmac.mastodon.social.ap.brid.gy
Our ideas about Packs
## Background Mastodon’s timeline doesn’t rely on dopamine-driven algorithms – it is chronological and consent-based, showing only posts from accounts you (the person using Mastodon) have followed. This focus on privacy and conscious consumption is what leads many people to join the Fediverse in the first place. It also places an unfair ultimatum on incoming users: You’ll have to make an effort to figure out who to follow, or your timeline will mostly be empty. Bluesky pioneered a brilliant solution to this “empty feed problem” in 2024, with the introduction of “Starter Packs”, a feature that allows users to curate and share their own collections of recommended accounts. We believe that these kinds of user-generated, curated collections could help people to find their tribe more quickly when they join the Fediverse. At the same time, envisioning a similar feature that prioritises user consent, _and_ works across a constellation of independent servers, is no small feat. In this blog post, we want to talk about bringing a similar concept to Mastodon and the Fediverse. We’ll use the word “Packs” to refer to the shareable collections of identifiers throughout, but we’ve not yet landed on final terminology - so, consider this word a placeholder, and not what this will definitely be called in Mastodon. ## Challenges and considerations We know that there have been existing efforts to make it easier to discover curated collections of users (for example, fedidevs.com offers “Starter Packs”). We’ve been happy to see these being shared, as they can help people discover interesting individuals and organisations to follow. We’d be equally happy to have the creators of these tools provide feedback on our own ideas 🙂 We believe that there are several ways to improve on the existing examples, that are more aligned with the values we try to bring to the Fediverse, and that offer more to the decentralised ecosystem as a whole. Firstly, it’s important to us that users have control over whether they appear in Packs on Mastodon. Early design explorations with our concept of Packs led us to the following possibilities: * Packs will become an extension of discovery. Users who wish to opt out entirely from Packs will be able to do so by disabling the existing setting, labelled _“Feature profile and posts in discovery algorithms”_. This will signal that an account cannot be added to a Pack. * Users will be notified when they are included in a Pack. Unlike on Bluesky, where users wishing to remove themselves from a Starter Pack must either report the Starter Pack, or block the user, users on Mastodon will have a more neutral mechanism to remove themselves from a Pack they do not wish to be part of. (note: we implemented something similar with the Quote Posts feature, where an original post can be removed from a quote post; this same idea would flow through to Packs). As always, federation presents its own challenges. Just as Mastodon users can follow people on other Fediverse servers, our goal is for them to also be able to find and interact with Packs created elsewhere in the Fediverse. When Alice creates a Pack on her server `example.com`, how does Bob on `example.online` get to know about it, and come to interact with it? What if `example.com` and `example.online` run different ActivityPub-compatible software? These questions can be addressed via established Fediverse discussion processes. ## Next steps We’re in the process of collaborating with other Fediverse developers on a Fediverse Enhancement Proposal (FEP), so that a common implementation for Packs can be made available to developers of any ActivityPub software. The initial work is now available on GitHub. The FEP process will be the place to direct any technical questions. Meanwhile, we’re also conducting broader research to understand overarching themes related to user onboarding, and how we can make things easier for people to get started on Mastodon. We expect to release an initial version of Packs, plus other minor improvements to onboarding, in Mastodon 4.6. In the meantime, the next stable release (Mastodon 4.5) is right around the corner! ### We want to hear your thoughts We want to make Packs a great feature for discovery and onboarding! If you have thoughts on the ideas described above (beyond the technical aspects that will be part of the FEP), contact us at [email protected]. We may not be able to respond to every individual message, but we’ll be reading every piece of feedback to learn more about your ideas.
blog.joinmastodon.org
Reposted by Richard MacManus
fediforum.mastodon.social.ap.brid.gy
Is #fediforum only for geeks?

Not at all! Users have come. Moderators. Artists. Public policy people. Media people. Creators. And many more, because the Open Social Web matters to all of them, and to all of us, around the world.

So join us online in just a bit! https://fediforum.org
FediForum
FediForum: moving the Open Social Web forward
fediforum.org
ricmac.mastodon.social.ap.brid.gy
My work inbox gets scarier every day:

Subject line: [A startup] launches Agentic Banking

"AI isn’t just analyzing finance anymore: it’s executing it."
Reposted by Richard MacManus
Reposted by Richard MacManus
bjoernsta.eimsbuettel.social.ap.brid.gy
Choice is power.
Choice is freedom.
And I will never have anyone take that away from me.

@_elena kicks off Berlin #fediday with something like a #fediverse creed.

#savesocial
Reposted by Richard MacManus
ricmac.mastodon.social.ap.brid.gy
In this week's Web Technology News, I unveil a new and improved format. I've added a "WTN Note" to many of the news items, so that this becomes more of a business and strategy briefing than just a list of interesting links. The 3 categories are now:

1. Web Platform Opportunities
2. Open Social […]
Original post on mastodon.social
mastodon.social
ricmac.mastodon.social.ap.brid.gy
To clarify, I’m referring to the comments on Jay’s own posts on Bluesky. I haven’t seen any personal abuse towards her on Mastodon. Maybe it’s just easier to avoid bottom of the barrel type stuff here.
ricmac.mastodon.social.ap.brid.gy
The personal abuse being directed at Bluesky’s CEO is deeply uncomfortable to read. Call me old fashioned, but it is never acceptable. I especially hate seeing that stuff from anonymous accounts that have cartoon avatars. It’s ok to debate the technical merits or otherwise of moderation, but not […]
Original post on mastodon.social
mastodon.social
ricmac.mastodon.social.ap.brid.gy
Also, a reminder that you can follow WTN here on Mastodon: @feed. If you want to be sure to see it, you're better off subscribing via email or RSS. But I do like having this newsletter on the fediverse too :)
ricmac.mastodon.social.ap.brid.gy
In this week's Web Technology News, I unveil a new and improved format. I've added a "WTN Note" to many of the news items, so that this becomes more of a business and strategy briefing than just a list of interesting links. The 3 categories are now:

1. Web Platform Opportunities
2. Open Social […]
Original post on mastodon.social
mastodon.social
ricmac.mastodon.social.ap.brid.gy
I'm currently working on my next "What the Internet Was Like in..." post for Cybercultural, this time for the year 2000. Wondering if anyone has specific memories about Flash websites that year? Or blogging, or social news sites like MetaFilter and Kuro5hin. Do let me know what comes to mind for […]
Original post on mastodon.social
mastodon.social
ricmac.mastodon.social.ap.brid.gy
I’m trying to post positive things, so here’s something: I’ve been enjoying Detroit techo lately, and especially “minimal techno.” Robert Hood was my fave listen today. Love this quote: “Around '92, everyone was just grabbing onto technology, everyone was big on tone generators. Rave was […]
Original post on mastodon.social
mastodon.social
ricmac.mastodon.social.ap.brid.gy
@reiver @classicweb Interesting! What happened to the site, and the founder? Doesn’t seem to be around these days.
Reposted by Richard MacManus
ricmac.mastodon.social.ap.brid.gy
Old articles and blog posts too often get removed from the web or neglected, left to rot on broken pages. Replanting lets you migrate legacy content to your current site so it can thrive again. Here's how I'm doing it... https://cybercultural.com/p/replanting/ #replanting #savetheweb
Replanting Articles: Bring Legacy Posts to Your Website
Old articles and blog posts too often get removed from the web or neglected, left to rot on broken pages. Replanting lets you migrate legacy content to your current site so it can thrive again.
cybercultural.com
ricmac.mastodon.social.ap.brid.gy
"Yahoo nears deal to sell AOL to Italy's Bending Spoons for $1.4 billion, sources say"

I bet Bending Spoons just wants to get its hands on Netscape.

https://www.reuters.com/world/yahoo-nears-deal-sell-aol-italys-bending-spoons-14-billion-sources-say-2025-10-01/
ricmac.mastodon.social.ap.brid.gy
Old articles and blog posts too often get removed from the web or neglected, left to rot on broken pages. Replanting lets you migrate legacy content to your current site so it can thrive again. Here's how I'm doing it... https://cybercultural.com/p/replanting/ #replanting #savetheweb
Replanting Articles: Bring Legacy Posts to Your Website
Old articles and blog posts too often get removed from the web or neglected, left to rot on broken pages. Replanting lets you migrate legacy content to your current site so it can thrive again.
cybercultural.com