I'm playing around with Offer activities in Fedify.
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I'm playing around with Offer activities in Fedify. The AP Vocab provides this, easy peasy.
Alice OFFERS Book to Bob
Bob ACCEPTS Alice's OFFEROr:
Bob OFFERS Rotten Tomato to Alice
Alice REJECTS Bob's OFFER----------------
But I'm not clear if this is right:
Alice ANNOUNCES OFFER of Labubu to Followers?
Bob OFFERS $10 for Labubu to Alice?
Alice ACCEPTS Bob's OFFER of $10 for Labubu?
Alice OFFERS Labubu to Bob
Bob ACCEPTS Labubu -
R ActivityRelay shared this topic
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I'm playing around with Offer activities in Fedify. The AP Vocab provides this, easy peasy.
Alice OFFERS Book to Bob
Bob ACCEPTS Alice's OFFEROr:
Bob OFFERS Rotten Tomato to Alice
Alice REJECTS Bob's OFFER----------------
But I'm not clear if this is right:
Alice ANNOUNCES OFFER of Labubu to Followers?
Bob OFFERS $10 for Labubu to Alice?
Alice ACCEPTS Bob's OFFER of $10 for Labubu?
Alice OFFERS Labubu to Bob
Bob ACCEPTS Labubu@box464 I think the Announce isn't really needed in the first place, the original Create should allow the object to reach its audience. Also, Offer is an activity, so the first one feels odd. I'd just Create a Note with the details, or some custom object if you want to have it used as a special logic for the frontend, or want to use custom fields for price for instance. Maybe using schema.org's Product (I just find the fact that they use their own Offer type for the price a bit confusing)
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I'm playing around with Offer activities in Fedify. The AP Vocab provides this, easy peasy.
Alice OFFERS Book to Bob
Bob ACCEPTS Alice's OFFEROr:
Bob OFFERS Rotten Tomato to Alice
Alice REJECTS Bob's OFFER----------------
But I'm not clear if this is right:
Alice ANNOUNCES OFFER of Labubu to Followers?
Bob OFFERS $10 for Labubu to Alice?
Alice ACCEPTS Bob's OFFER of $10 for Labubu?
Alice OFFERS Labubu to Bob
Bob ACCEPTS Labubu@smallcircles@social.coop @box464@mastodon.social oh super interesting!
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@smallcircles@social.coop @box464@mastodon.social oh super interesting!
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@box464 I think the Announce isn't really needed in the first place, the original Create should allow the object to reach its audience. Also, Offer is an activity, so the first one feels odd. I'd just Create a Note with the details, or some custom object if you want to have it used as a special logic for the frontend, or want to use custom fields for price for instance. Maybe using schema.org's Product (I just find the fact that they use their own Offer type for the price a bit confusing)
Yes. Depending on what you want I'd follow a more design-first approach of the particular domain you want to model. And not shy away from custom types, or better, an existing domain-specific vocab.
On the fediverse there's this urge to try to cram and map any functionality on the poor #ActivityStreams vocabulary, which only has a small number of 'social networking primitives' to work with. The use case section in the spec at par. 5.8.12 states that Offer involves "offering one object to another" which is a very low-level technical ability, more indicating of a protocol capability than for general use as "business domain".
https://www.w3.org/TR/activitystreams-vocabulary/#motivations
In your last scenario "Bidding" seems to indicate the business domain / bounded context, part of perhaps a larger eCommerce toplevel domain. You might use https://eventmodeling.org
Also: who is the actor? You may have an Offer service, and "OfferService announces Alice's offer".
Interesting too: https://offerbots.org/the-problem/
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Yes. Depending on what you want I'd follow a more design-first approach of the particular domain you want to model. And not shy away from custom types, or better, an existing domain-specific vocab.
On the fediverse there's this urge to try to cram and map any functionality on the poor #ActivityStreams vocabulary, which only has a small number of 'social networking primitives' to work with. The use case section in the spec at par. 5.8.12 states that Offer involves "offering one object to another" which is a very low-level technical ability, more indicating of a protocol capability than for general use as "business domain".
https://www.w3.org/TR/activitystreams-vocabulary/#motivations
In your last scenario "Bidding" seems to indicate the business domain / bounded context, part of perhaps a larger eCommerce toplevel domain. You might use https://eventmodeling.org
Also: who is the actor? You may have an Offer service, and "OfferService announces Alice's offer".
Interesting too: https://offerbots.org/the-problem/
Btw, I added #OfferBots at the end, a (halted) project by Andrew Mackie, that has a very interesting concept for the #ActivityPub fedi. The website describes *very well* the problem with "aggregators" to be addressed, but the solution section of the website is not up to par. It was stopped right at the time when Andrew became aware of the fediverse.
Discussed here on #SocialHub:
https://socialhub.activitypub.rocks/t/offers-unchained-federated-offerbots/697
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Btw, I added #OfferBots at the end, a (halted) project by Andrew Mackie, that has a very interesting concept for the #ActivityPub fedi. The website describes *very well* the problem with "aggregators" to be addressed, but the solution section of the website is not up to par. It was stopped right at the time when Andrew became aware of the fediverse.
Discussed here on #SocialHub:
https://socialhub.activitypub.rocks/t/offers-unchained-federated-offerbots/697
To just name a well-known existing eCommerce vocabulary: GoodRelations.
http://wiki.goodrelations-vocabulary.org/Cookbook/
Not saying it is appropriate, or the only choice, but just as example. Here you'd have a gr:Offering instead of an as:Offer to indicate "something available for purchase (or bartering)". And there are a bunch of constructs to model payment, delivery methods, etc.
Avoiding the very generic as:Offer has the advantage you convey proper meaning, and don't get to deal with "whack-a-mole" development where you have to adapt your internal business logic to all the overloaded uses some app developer put on the fediverse wire for their own custom as:Offer interpretation

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To just name a well-known existing eCommerce vocabulary: GoodRelations.
http://wiki.goodrelations-vocabulary.org/Cookbook/
Not saying it is appropriate, or the only choice, but just as example. Here you'd have a gr:Offering instead of an as:Offer to indicate "something available for purchase (or bartering)". And there are a bunch of constructs to model payment, delivery methods, etc.
Avoiding the very generic as:Offer has the advantage you convey proper meaning, and don't get to deal with "whack-a-mole" development where you have to adapt your internal business logic to all the overloaded uses some app developer put on the fediverse wire for their own custom as:Offer interpretation

If you look at https://forgefed.org it chose to implement as:Offer in the context of "software development" toplevel domain (or perhaps "code forges" application domain).
Here we may say that it is alright to do so, if its use adheres the informatively specified functionality of "offering one object to another" in that general sense.
Yet I think I'd model this quite differently, and mapping to ActivityStreams is more a disadvantage than anything else. The spec has to describe the combinatorial logic of what to do when receiving as:Offer and needs a 'smart pre-processor' to determine the use case and bounded context.
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