@brianoflondon if any Linux users have issues, I recommend the bitwarden extension. It's the most reliable ways to use passkeys there so far and will soon bring passkeys to Android.
What I think a lot of people don't realize is how extensible systems like the Fediverse are. It's unfortunately very common, even within the developer sphere, to assume that something can't be done just because it hasn't been done.
1) We're having similar talks with @John_Livingston regarding aligning chat specifications between the Podcast XML namespace and ActivityPub. I wonder if we could come up with some kind of "best practices" for going between XML Schema <-> JSON-LD? 2) Similarly, @John_Livingston mentioned PeerTube 5.1.0 allows plugins to modify the ActivityPub object which would allow this functionally, once we decide what it could be
Say you start/own a thread for comments on a podcast or video. Someone from another instance makes a reply directly to the top-level AP object with highly illegal content and you want to delete it on your side to prevent it from being seen by others.
While it's marked as deleted in your "gui", as peertube appears to be doing, should we expect to omit the "deleted" object from the replies/comments collection?
Or do we merely rely on reporting + moderation and hope it's deleted eventually, even though we might not see the deleted activity?
@errhead Looks like it hasn't been removed from the comments collection. That could be caching or it might not be removed at all.
@alex What is the generally expected behavior in a situation like this? We're trying to determine what AP servers do/expect when comments are "deleted" or "hidden" from a thread if you don't control the originating server.
I'm just not convinced we should have decentralized identities. Microsoft helped drive the spec forward for a reason... if i wanted a foolproof way to track people online and tie government identities to them, DIDs look great.
The tech is interesting, but something about it gives me the feeling that we're boiling frogs. A great example of security going against privacy.