Not sure if this has already been posted since it’s kind of old news (early 2024), but I think that’s exciting. I’m currently looking into blog software with nice webgui and I might wait for this to become real. Looking at the announcement page, they seem to take it seriously and there’s continuous merged PRs since April until recently regarding AP on their GitHub.

    • @JustAnotherKay
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      68 hours ago

      I look at it like this: ActivityPub is to RSS as a GUI is to a CLI.

      Meaning, you could already use the tools (RSS or the CLI) that are there to do the task, but someone has created something (protocol, AP or application, GUI) to make that task easier. In the case of RSS and AP, that task is generally getting content in front of the user. With RSS I have to go hunt down RSS feeds and whatnot, but with AP I just interact with stuff and wait for the people I interact with to interact with stuff, and then I get content.

    • dantheclamman
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      39 hours ago

      People can follow and comment to my WordPress from the fediverse. My posts are long enough that they don’t really look right on Mastodon (and images all show up as attachments rather than inline), but nice for shorter format blogs

    • @[email protected]OP
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      712 hours ago

      Mostly commenting though the Fediverse, yes, but they also develop the possibility to follow other Fedi users and have a timeline when logged in.

      I think most current blog commenting systems have some drawback (closed platform like discuss, limited to WordPress, or something that requires email confirmation, captcha or something else) so the ability to comment from another service is a huge factor for me.

    • @chaospatterns
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      411 hours ago

      I’m working on adding ActivityPub to my Hugo blog right now. I support RSS, but I figured AP support means that you can get it into your Mastodon feed or even Lemmy feed making it easy to follow. Additionally, commenting (assuming it doesn’t get taken over by spammers.)

    • @[email protected]
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      713 hours ago

      And you would be able to see blog posts in a fediverse feed and subscribe to a blog that way.

    • @[email protected]
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      410 hours ago

      I tried a random Writefreely instance and it was extremely barebones and had poor markdown styling. It gave me the impression that Writefreely is more for publishing short stories, rather than technical content.

      (Is that the point of Writefreely?)

    • @[email protected]OP
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      212 hours ago

      I never tried writefreely, but I was under the impression that it’s really focused on, well, writing. Maybe it’s not used that much, but I would like to have the ability to easily upload pictures and include them in the articles with some formatting options etc.

      • @[email protected]
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        29 hours ago

        The people who make writefreely are saying that they are working on making image uploads possible for self-hosted instances, not just their own at write.as. Currently if you are self-hosting you can insert an image but it must be hosted elsewhere and inserted via a markdown link.

      • @asdfasdfasdf
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        210 hours ago

        You can do that but only under paid accounts.

    • Ulrich
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      3519 hours ago

      It’s a blogging platform. So similar to WordPress. Although it looks a lot nicer.

      The really cool thing is that it has support for payments in the Self-hosted version, which I’ve not personally seen before.

      • recursive_recursion they/them
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        1019 hours ago

        gotcha thanks!

        The really cool thing is that it has support for payments in the Self-hosted version, which I’ve not personally seen before.

        huh that’s actually pretty neat!

    • @markstos
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      917 hours ago

      Wordpress has become an all-purpose CMS known security vulnerabilities via unsafe plugins.

      Ghost has APIs instead of plugins for nearly everything, so it eliminated a lot of security and maintenance headache that way.

      Ghost focuses on just a few features centered around independent content creators: blogging, email newsletters and subscriptions.

      So features for sending bulk emails and accepting payments are built in, but you won’t find native support for other things like podcasts or recipe markup.

      Ghost meets my need, and I love not dealing with 30 plugins at risk of being exploited if I don’t upgrade them promptly.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      1219 hours ago

      It’s simpler/more lightweight than WordPress, but generally yes (don’t know squarespace)

  • @[email protected]
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    19 hours ago

    I’ve been following their work on implementing this via their newsletter and it seems to be coming along nicely. Can’t wait for them to complete implementing it.

  • @[email protected]
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    11 hours ago

    Is this a valid WordPress replacement?

    Edit: nope, its closed source

    Edit2: oh, it is open source. But the install instructions are glaringly insecure

      • @[email protected]
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        17 hours ago

        Npm package manager is vulnerable to mitm attacks. The packages aren’t signed like, for example, apt does

  • andypiper
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    718 hours ago

    There was a good talk about this at FOSDEM at the weekend!

  • @[email protected]
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    417 hours ago

    Awesome! Once this is out, I think I will migrate my blog from WriteFreely to Ghost. I hope I can reduce disruption for existing followers though…

    • @[email protected]OP
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      115 hours ago

      I think there’s no way to remain at the same domain with a different Fedi service unfortunately :/

  • Samantha Xavia
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    418 hours ago

    To be honest it’s amazing to see this sort of thing. I’m really waiting for Ghost to become a lot more accessible to the Fediverse as I love writing my little Articles but it seems to not be worth it as much if users can’t interact and talk on the page as easily.

    Hopefully they open it up to lots more users and articles in the future.