> However, I disagree with some of the analysis, and have a couple specific points to correct.
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Christine Lemmer-Webberreplied to Christine Lemmer-Webber last edited by
Bryan's definition (more accurately Mark Nottingham's definition):
> [...] federation, i.e., designing a function in a way that uses independent instances that maintain connectivity and interoperability to provide a single cohesive service.
Hm okay, well these don't look quite as far apart, right?
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Christine Lemmer-Webberreplied to Christine Lemmer-Webber last edited by
So what's the delta?
- The discussion of power dynamics, once again, is not present.
- "Cooperation" is not present.
- And very specifically, "decentralization" and "no node holding more power than the responsibility or communication of its parts" is not present.Turns out this has a big effect.
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Christine Lemmer-Webberreplied to Christine Lemmer-Webber last edited by
Re-read and compare. Under that last definition, even corporate but proprietary internal microservice architectures or devops platforms would qualify as federated!
Maybe? But it's not federation in a *decentralization* context.
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Christine Lemmer-Webberreplied to Christine Lemmer-Webber last edited by
(That last observation is thanks to @vv btw, good observation from a good gf)
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Christine Lemmer-Webberreplied to Christine Lemmer-Webber last edited by
Bryan then acknowledges it's a comparatively low bar:
> What about federation? I do think that atproto involves independent services collectively communicating to provide a cohesive and unified whole, which both definitions touch on, and meets Mark's low-bar definition.
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Olivier Mehanireplied to Christine Lemmer-Webber last edited by
@cwebber Side adventure: is email federated by that definition?
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Christine Lemmer-Webberreplied to Olivier Mehani last edited by
@shtrom email is absolutely federated per my previous blogpost
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Christine Lemmer-Webberreplied to Christine Lemmer-Webber last edited by
But actually in this case, Mark Nottingham's definition happened directly within a context talking about "decentralization mechanisms", enough so that maybe it was stronger in the RFC. I dunno.
More comments on the RFC in a bit though.
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Christine Lemmer-Webberreplied to Christine Lemmer-Webber last edited by
However, Bryan does concede the following:
> Overall, I think federation isn't the best term for Bluesky to emphasize going forward, though I also don't think it was misleading or factually incorrect to use it to date.
Well okay, actually that's quite the thing to concede, so massive props on that
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David Megginsonreplied to Christine Lemmer-Webber last edited by
@cwebber Yes, very true. A network is decentralised only if you can remove any node and the network keeps functioning.
If we removed a giant node like mastodon.social, we'd temporarily lose a lot of accounts but the fediverse would keep functioning just fine (probably better in the long run if it permanently eliminated a dominant player).
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Octavia con Amore :pink_moon_and_stars:replied to Christine Lemmer-Webber last edited by
@cwebber out of curiosity, has social dot coop ever thought about not having a 500 character limit? I adored your last thread, and I'll eventually get around to reading this one as well, but it feels like having at least a few thousand per post would make it a bit less unwieldy
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Christine Lemmer-Webberreplied to Christine Lemmer-Webber last edited by
Bryan also in that same paragraph goes on to mention some very interesting history about Bluesky's earlier prototypes and how the design changed. Worth reading btw. But that's an aside, kinda.
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Christine Lemmer-Webberreplied to Christine Lemmer-Webber last edited by
It seems that there might be more of a concession here that Bluesky isn't federated, so the bigger question really is whether or not it's decentralized.
I mentioned that the definition is interesting in context and BOY is it interesting in context, oh gosh oh boy
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Christine Lemmer-Webberreplied to Christine Lemmer-Webber last edited by
Hey remember earlier when I said this thing:
> now here is Bryan's definition (more accurately Mark Nottingham's definition (more accurately, Paul Baran's definition)) of decentralization
Did you notice all the parentheses? That's not JUST because I love lisp
I mean I do love lisp
But not only
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Philippa Cowderoyreplied to Christine Lemmer-Webber last edited by
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Christine Lemmer-Webberreplied to Christine Lemmer-Webber last edited by
We need to understand Mark Nottingham's RFC and we need to understand Paul Baran's seminal 1964 paper both, within the contexts they were written, before we can pull this quote-of-a-quote out.
So let's start with the RFC.
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Christine Lemmer-Webberreplied to Christine Lemmer-Webber last edited by
If you hear "Respected standards technologist Mark Nottingham's independent IETF RFC 9518: Centralization, Decentralization, and Internet Standards", what do you think you'll find inside?
I'll tell you what I'd expect
Rah rah decentralization!! The internet was meant to be free!!!
Well...
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Christine Lemmer-Webberreplied to Christine Lemmer-Webber last edited by
You should read the RFC yourself, here it is: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/rfc9518/
Mark Nottingham is a respected, accomplished standards author. And with good reason. Most of his work history is representing standards for big corporate players.
That's how most of it is these days, actually
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Christine Lemmer-Webberreplied to Christine Lemmer-Webber last edited by
The surrounding context of the RFC is a debate within the IETF and elsewhere: gosh! this internet! it sure seems to have centralized a *lot*, is this really what we wanted to happen to it? This wasn't the original vision!
Shouldn't standards orgs do something to fix it?!
Well should they?
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Christine Lemmer-Webberreplied to Christine Lemmer-Webber last edited by
Mark Nottingham's own words answer better than I do, and you should read the RFC. It's not quite one way or the other. It's kind of a "well decentralization is great and yeah centralization is bad but how realistic is decentralizing things anyway and when?"
But Mark's own words handle it better