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?

  • asudox@programming.dev
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    3 months ago

    Ok? What exactly are you trying to tell me with this? RSS still has no builtin discoverability tool, that’s a fact and won’t change.

    • matcha_addict@lemy.lolOP
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      3 months ago

      I am responding to your point about RSS not having ability to discover new content whereas activityPub can. I summarized my point in the last paragraph. To reiterate, I agree that RSS doesn’t have built in discoverability, but whatever ActivityPub has is not solving the discoverability problem. Let me know which part you don’t understand please and I’d be glad to clarify.

      • asudox@programming.dev
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        3 months ago

        I disagree. Discoverability is to discover new stuff from new places you haven’t seen before. In Lemmy, for example, I can sort by All/New and I’ll discover lots of new things I haven’t seen from new places. Interesting to me or not, there’s discoverability.