I know they’re quite different technically. But practically, what does ActivityPub unlock that was not previously possible with RSS and basic web tech stack?

I think I have an idea of the answer. RSS may provide a way for users to “subscribe” to content from a feed, equivalent of following and putting it in a unified feed.

But it does not have a way for users to interact with the poster, like comments or likes. This may be possible with a basic web stack though, but either users will have to make accounts on every person’s site, or the site has to accept no user auth. (but this could be resolved with a identity provider standard, like disqus does)

I suppose another thing activityPub does is distribute content to multiple servers. Not sure if this is really desirable though?

Anyways, did I miss anything?

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    14 months ago

    Deduplicate by IP/user-agent and you’ll get a pretty accurate count. Some people might be moving between wifi and data, but for the most part you can account for that. Same process as fingerprinting a browser.

    • @Zak
      link
      English
      54 months ago

      Yes, it’s possible to get a rough estimate with some technical work, but AP makes it easy for anyone.

      • @[email protected]OP
        link
        fedilink
        English
        14 months ago

        AP doesn’t really do this. A subscriber may be a dead account, or may be someone that hasn’t checked your feed in months. Even a technical analysis would be difficult here.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      1
      edit-2
      4 months ago

      One single popular cloud service that fetches the data for the users and this stops being true.