In this post, we outline a new project which gives a name to some values we hold tightly at DEV.
First, an examination of the web we live with...
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So like Mastodon meets StackOverflow?
That's a good way of putting it.
It's definitely Mastodon meets something. Another lines of thinking is a decentralized Reddit where DEV is like
/r/programming
and/r/javascript
is also a thing but so is/r/nba
and/r/torontoraptors
etc.All of which could be stood up independently by entrepreneurs or general community builders and their place within a broader mesh would come down to shared ideas about community moderation principles etc. Of course, as everyone knows, effective and inclusive moderation is core to our whole project and we'll always want to be leaders in this aspect.
The key is that incentives are aligned, and the value creation goes as far as possible. It's part of the magic of open source and we're just trying to build cool things.
There are also use cases for private networks (e.g. company intranets) as well as a possible replacement for hulking Slack communities etc.
Project Benatar sort of sets this up because the connective tissue between the programming community and the basketball community is your website. How profiles are shared across spaces etc. is something we'll figure out.
Our project has always been super longterm-oriented, but as we expect to release some of the pieces within this year, the shape of the whole idea could start becoming clearer.
What's the differentiator between the DEViverse and Mastodon in that case? A push toward universal, open protocols of communication between social networking sites? Or do you see DEV as expanding beyond social networking and blogging?
We're not necessarily trying to define what we do in terms of how it differentiates with other approaches, but we feel like our efforts of consistently scratching our own itches in terms of building inclusive community and making the content on the platform have initial impact as well as lasting values are things we hope others can replicate with the tooling we've built.
I think Mastodon took a more bottom-up approach where the ecosystem was designed to be federated from day one and the choices were always centered around that goal. I think this leads to different UX choices and userbase relationships along the way. Who knows, the ideas could converge, but for now we're happy to be plugging forward with solving our problems as they arise and hopefully create a situation where the software we built is as open and re-useable as possible.
There was another thread comparing and contrasting DEV with HashNode and I think the comments were right to ultimately conclude that DEV didn't really differentiate strongly for the better strictly in terms of platform but we've always had good ideas in terms of community building. As community building helps us ultimately create better software we create a positive reinforcement loop for the better.
The answer is probably yes in that I'm not necessarily trying to draw lines of where this project goes, but I'm not entirely sure what you mean here. Could you expand?
I think I was thinking of along a more narrow "product differentiation"-type vein, whereas you might have a more grandiose vision. This comment...
Love the POSSE adherence.
To me, federation is key (and the reason email is so popular). Is there such a thing for spreading content semi-automatically?
I'd expect either HTML or Markdown as a basis, and wonder how that would play with embeds and custom tags.
...might better outline what you're thinking? DEV wouldn't be just a social media site, but rather sort of a standardised mode of communication? Or maybe I'm extremely confused and should just wait for the press release 😂
Though probably more like SO blogs or something, since SO is for questions and answers, rather than discussion. This platform (like Medium) is definitely more for discussion.
I do love the premise here, though. It's actually one of the reasons that I've started to try and excise myself from the gravity well of many of these huge systems.
If you look at when the web was young, and Google embraced and supported things like RSS and other open protocols. They've tried many times to kill off and destroy those parts of the open web, to say nothing of Facebook (and how incredibly ironic is it that they've introduced their own cryptocurrency? The only more bizarre organization I could think of issuing crypto would be the US treasury).
I've been working to get back to open protocols like email and RSS/Atom, among others. Storing, rather than streaming.
The other thing about these massive bodies is that they have a commercial necessity to bring you back in, so notifications become a huge part of people's lives. I noticed that I was living in a notification-heavy world, so I started dismantling my notifications, keeping them only for the actually important things.
My life feels a lot more calm, and I've created content more often, by quite a bit.
I do like the idea of federation, like Secure Scuttlebutt, or Mastodon, but so far what I've seen about federation is that there's still some lack of control, as well as in some cases a lack of... I don't know what you'd call it, but basically - we have multiple devices usually, and we need better tools to be able to bring our content(s) with us. Without necessarily having to depend on a commercial service, aside from the availability of TCP/IP, or the Internet.
I don't have those answers yet, though :P
Love the POSSE adherence.
To me, federation is key (and the reason email is so popular). Is there such a thing for spreading content semi-automatically?
I'd expect either HTML or Markdown as a basis, and wonder how that would play with embeds and custom tags.
Yeah, this is why off-the-shelf tooling might need to be built on. We took a loose standard (markdown) and built our own custom integrations (using liquid syntax), which is similar to other implementations so not entirely off-standard but still its own thing. The embeds are also fairly tightly tied to their own data and context, (like the authenticated GitHub API for example).
So there are some questions to be figured out. I think our parsers will have to spit out different versions of posts for different contexts (our embeds already don't play wonderfully with RSS readers so we could probably already be doing this to be honest), but ultimately I think we have the tools to build a lot of good shared spaces where reading config can be ported but control of the various shared spaces is federated.
Ultimately, enabling a lot of "medium-sized" web experiences to work effectively with the small things is a more fruitful path than dreaming of a web where everything is a tiny website. Medium-sized platforms and ecosystems strike me as the goldilox zone where you can put a lot of work into custom community-centric experiences without becoming overly powerful.
I think there was an era on the web where interest-based forums had a bigger and better role. I think the form-factor itself loses out to the more flexible social media idea and that has contributed to the downfall of these forums, but if we could return to some of what made those feel so intimate and awesome, we're in a good place.
(I think I went in a major tangent to reply, as I'm one to do sometimes) 😄
We’re excited to be a part of this initiative together with the DEV Community looking at new ways to publish, syndicate and own content on the web
Ben jamming hard. 👍
Dev.to leadership team is tuned. 🔥
The web was more fun with different things everywhere.
Video is monopolized (someone?). 👀
Man, these metaphors are on point
They are indeed on point Christopher. 👍
thewayoftheweb.net/should-you-stop...
@ben If you made it up, or learned about it from research = 🔥
web.archive.org/web/20081118193815...
web.archive.org/web/20081118200905... @jess @peter @maestromac 👀😳🤣
I came to it on my own but I’m not surprised it’s also already a thing
Nice work. Usually large site owners want to avoid the topic.
It was starting to be a thing. I wrote a bunch about this stuff on some very public tech sites (we revisit later). They managed to quash dissenting voices & replace with shills/one voice.
It's the first time I have seen someone pick it back up in a while, but watch out as it is at the core of their strategy & they don't like it.
It's a moral imperative now & the kind of thing that can actually make a real difference.
Just the direction things should be going. Decentralized but connected.
I'm still worried that maintaining consistency and quality at scale will be the biggest obstacle (I know this is the intention behind the project, but still). I know it may be a touchy subject, but have you reached out to Free Code Camp? It seems there may be some serious idealogical overlap.
Really cool read overall!
I certainly would think so! We should reach out just to level set in general. We'll see how that goes. We certainly don't feel like the issues have been resolved at all but hopefully we could create a dialog where we're not speaking past each other.
Definitely. If we wanted to do something easy this probably wouldn't be what we put our effort into 😄
I'd say the big bet here is that open source code gives us eyeballs efficiencies we could never achieve on our own and creating systems which are generally big enough independently to have dedicated maintenance will be important. I think a medium number of medium-sized things generally would be better than a small number of huge things or a huge number of small things.
We shall see.
If you're interested in the genesis of the concept of "data gravity", check out this 2010 blog post from Dave McCrory, generally credited with coining the term :-)
Minor gripe - mixed metaphors are specifically things like 'hit the nail right between the nose' and 'not the sharpest cookie in the jar', which I don't think you've used.
I could only see vanilla flavoured metaphors (see what I did there?)
Something you've done much better than Mastodon, Diaspora, etc. in my opinion is to build the shining city on the hill first, get a lot of stake from users, and then generalise it and give it to people to equip the wider community.
It could have been much harder (and less successful) to try and drop that software a year ago if that had been the priority. But now you have a crowd really excited about the whole thing.
P.s. Happy to see you folks explicitly using the POSSE term (first time I've noticed it here) as it's been clear for a while that that's what you're going for.
Loving everything about this. Thanks Dev team!
Great article! I Love DEV. For small starters like me this had a Lot of helpful Tips and conventions. Keep it up and Ben actually Made me Lauch 😂
Loving the vision! Look forward to seeing it flourish!
Thanks Chris!
Finally a project that's actually interesting!
Are you served out of just one country? Will content have have some protection from the trade leverages of just one country? One party? One politician?
You should team up with the folks at: write.as/principles as you share a lot of the same values. Build bridges!
How do Moons contribute to a galaxy?