Hello comrades, I’m new to this and looking for resources to explain the fediverse to a dummy, hopefully with simplistic drawings. I understand it is essentially an “open source social media format” created for ease of moderation and to protect user data from corporate use, but I don’t understand the concept of federation vs de federation of other social media site data.

  • Drewfro66@lemmygrad.ml
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    2 months ago

    Like others have said, Lemmy runs off of ActivityPub, an open-source protocol similar to Email. Some other applications, such as Mastodon, Kbin, and PixelFed, also use ActivityPub, which is why you can occasionally see posts from those apps if a Lemmy-user shares them.

    “Easier Moderation” and “Protecting data” are good, sure, but the main benefit of Open-Source, Federated Social Media is the decentralization and taking power over media away from corporations.

    Imagine if Email was closed-source, like Reddit. In order to send or receive email you had to make an account on “Email.com”, the email corporation could read your private messages to “moderate”, they could ban your account if you send emails they disagree with.

    And you might say, “But I use Gmail, and Google can do all those things!”, and that’s true! And the same is true for Lemmy.world or, yes, even Hexbear.net. What makes Email (and ActivityPub, which Lemmy uses) different is that you can rent a domain name from Mali, set up a computer in your basement, and host your own server. And you can send emails from “[email protected]” just as easily as you can [email protected].

    And just like I can send an email from my own private email server to someone with a Gmail account, you can send a private message with a Hexbear account to Lemmy.world (or, even, Mastodon social or Threads.net, assuming neither party explicitly blocks traffic).