Making the case for richer HTML in ActivityPub
-
Evan Prodromoureplied to Mike Macgirvin 🖥️ on last edited by
@mikedev @silverpill it might be time to dust off the OpenSocial spec and consider how this could work in stream. I don't think arbitrary JS is a good idea, but it might be interesting to have user-installable widgets in a sandbox.
-
@[email protected] I think even @[email protected] could agree that Mastodon has done the bare minimum of support. They used to only support straight text (and even now, composing in Mastodon is plaintext only), but have since allowed a heavily locked-down subset of HTML.
Allowing arbitrary JavaScript execution is a bad idea, but relaxing html sanitisation to the minimum would allow for much more expressive content. Inline images and tabular data are two tags I'd like to see allowed, but herein lies the problem... What subset of HTML do you feel comfortable with? I wager that different implementers would answer differently, and Mastodon eschewing certain tags in order to prioritize the textual microblogging style is their choice, too!
The fact of the matter is Mastodon needn't support all the tags under the sun, but they do need to acknowledge that received content is not faithfully represented in all cases, and so a prompt to view the content on the original site would be a good intermediate step.
There already exists an ActivityStreams object type for this kind of content:
as:Article
. It gives other implementers a chance to explicitly say "hey, this might be better viewed natively if you don't elect to show everything we send you". I'd love to make this a reality. -
@mike @mikedev @silverpill the design we built into AP is to make external apps that use OAuth 2.0 and the ActivityPub API to interact with your account.
https://evanp.me/2024/04/22/cross-server-interactions-in-activitypub/
-
Richard MacManusreplied to Evan Prodromou on last edited by
@evan @mikedev @silverpill Federated start pages? Getting Netvibes vibes here
-
@julian @johnonolan @mike the origins of ActivityPub is Atom, which had the name/summary/content split, and we preserved that through the various Activity Streams iterations, from Atom to JSON to the current JSON plus LD.
Mastodon undermines this by ignoring post names and treating summary as a Content Warning. -
@julian @johnonolan @mike it still baffles me that the content encoding standards aren’t the same as email. The spec is already there, why not use it?
-
@julian @johnonolan @mike
Would be remiss to not mention that Hometown, which is a "light" Mastodon fork supports the Article post type and has no issues rendering long form.
https://github.com/hometown-fork/hometown?tab=readme-ov-file#reading-more-content-types -
[email protected]replied to julian on last edited by [email protected]
First, it’s disturbing to find a “threadiverse working group” hosted inside a centralised exclusive walled garden (community.nodebb.org is a Cloudflare site that restricts access and undermines transparency). A threadiverse working group should be aligned with the core fediverse principle of decentralisation. It signals unfitness to lead the threadiverse. I will not be subscribing to this exclusive community or following it.
As for the topic at hand, we must separate the good ideas from the bad.
The good:
- Embedding the whole article in the post – great idea for many reasons:
- the web has become mostly exclusive (Cloudflare, paywalls, tor hostility, loss of netneutrality), thus most links being shared are to places that restrict some demographics of people.
- enshitification of the web means everyone visiting the link will have to fight with dark patterns, tracking, cookie walls, popups, and countless other shitty downgrades on everyone’s attempt to consume content. By copying the content to an accessible enshitification-free post, everyone commenting can enjoy equal access to the content
The bad:
- Enrichening the HTML risks bringing enshitification into the threadiverse. Of course there would be tooling that makes it easy to mirror a webpage into the post in an automated way. The garbage on the webpage that downgrades everyone’s UX will be replicated. Users are lazy as fuck. Instead of cleaning up the garbage they will just let it ride and burden everyone else.
- Try looking at websites in
lynx
. The web has become a shitshow of chasing the shiny and breaking our basic need for reading text. It’s inherently exclusive because those on capped internet connections cannot afford the bandwidth for eye candy. A text-based client should be able to function well and interact with all the content. It should be accessible from an a11y standpoint.
- Embedding the whole article in the post – great idea for many reasons:
-
First, it’s disturbing to find a “threadiverse working group” hosted inside a centralised exclusive walled garden (community.nodebb.org is a Cloudflare site that restricts access and undermines transparency). A threadiverse working group should be aligned with the core fediverse principle of decentralisation. It signals unfitness to lead the threadiverse. I will not be subscribing to this exclusive community or following it.
Hi DiyRebel,
Just so I can follow, isnt Cloudfare the domain registrar? Why does it reflect badly, in your opinion, on a project?
Im not necessarily disagreeing with you, just wondering why having that company involved in the domain, 'tars' whatever is hosted via them?