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  3. I have deeply mixed feelings about #ActivityPub's adoption of JSON-LD, as someone who's spent way too long dealing with it while building #Fedify.

I have deeply mixed feelings about #ActivityPub's adoption of JSON-LD, as someone who's spent way too long dealing with it while building #Fedify.

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  • Matthew ExonM Matthew Exon

    @hongminhee @julian I'm a true believer in RDF from back in the day, so I'm hardly neutral. But...

    There are essentially no interesting ActivityPub extensions right now. Even Evan's chess example, no-one's actually using AP to play chess. It's just ActivityStreams + a few cute tricks now and then. Even if there were extensions, existing AP servers chop off and throw away data they don't understand. so none of these extensions could work.

    I feel like most of the "WTF am I learning JSON-LD for" criticisms are coming from this status quo. That includes "if someone wants to add a gallery thing or whatever, can't they make a FEP?" The way things work now, your extension either a) works only in your software or b) has to be painfully negotiated with the whole community. We're all gonna have a big fight about it on this forum anyway. Let's not pretend JSON-LD helps us.

    But if we add two things to the mix, the situation looks different. Those are 1. server software that "keeps all the bits", and 2. a whitelabel extensible app. That would make it very easy to spin up crazy new experiences for a sizeable existing userbase. Developers should not be forced to endure a FEP process, and they should not have to attract a userbase from nothing. They should be able to just build, without even worrying if they're stepping on toes. And of course, Fedify and libraries in other languages are a load-bearing part of that world, including enforcement of the JSON-LD rules.

    That world does not exist at all today, but JSON-LD does, so it's pretty valid to describe this design as premature optimisation. I dunno though, we don't seem that far away.

    julianJ This user is from outside of this forum
    julianJ This user is from outside of this forum
    julian
    wrote last edited by
    #10

    @mat@friendica.exon.name that's a really interesting point of view, and has some parallels to how app development on the ATProto side is easier in many ways.

    I do think that this is something C2S (aka the ActivityPub API) can enable.

    I am critical of JSON-LD but I do certainly recognize I could be very wrong ๐Ÿ˜

    Sebastian LasseS 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • julianJ julian

      @mat@friendica.exon.name that's a really interesting point of view, and has some parallels to how app development on the ATProto side is easier in many ways.

      I do think that this is something C2S (aka the ActivityPub API) can enable.

      I am critical of JSON-LD but I do certainly recognize I could be very wrong ๐Ÿ˜

      Sebastian LasseS This user is from outside of this forum
      Sebastian LasseS This user is from outside of this forum
      Sebastian Lasse
      wrote last edited by
      #11

      @julian @mat

      Do you know about the backgrounds of the immers project ?
      , "no-one's actually using AP to play chess"
      the reason that we have noa AP chess service _anymore_ is #uspol โ€ฆ

      This all feels very unfair somehow cause I know the backgrounds but anyway โ€ฆ
      While we 2 days ago had a long thread about our use of Chess Games I will link the video from the thread https://digitalcourage.social/@sl007/116023149133783002

      immers with its federated locations and positional audio etc was supernice for playing chess !
      Our use is fairly similar and straightforward like we did the chess Social CG meeting in 2018 and the rc3 (usually 18.000 people physically but here it was virtually cause pandemics) https://socialhub.activitypub.rocks/t/rc3-chaos-communication-congress/1202

      Maybe it would really be fair if people are new to look into the 20 years Social CG history where some volunteers really gave much work ๐Ÿ™‚
      ๐Ÿงต 1/2

      Sebastian LasseS 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • Sebastian LasseS Sebastian Lasse

        @julian @mat

        Do you know about the backgrounds of the immers project ?
        , "no-one's actually using AP to play chess"
        the reason that we have noa AP chess service _anymore_ is #uspol โ€ฆ

        This all feels very unfair somehow cause I know the backgrounds but anyway โ€ฆ
        While we 2 days ago had a long thread about our use of Chess Games I will link the video from the thread https://digitalcourage.social/@sl007/116023149133783002

        immers with its federated locations and positional audio etc was supernice for playing chess !
        Our use is fairly similar and straightforward like we did the chess Social CG meeting in 2018 and the rc3 (usually 18.000 people physically but here it was virtually cause pandemics) https://socialhub.activitypub.rocks/t/rc3-chaos-communication-congress/1202

        Maybe it would really be fair if people are new to look into the 20 years Social CG history where some volunteers really gave much work ๐Ÿ™‚
        ๐Ÿงต 1/2

        Sebastian LasseS This user is from outside of this forum
        Sebastian LasseS This user is from outside of this forum
        Sebastian Lasse
        wrote last edited by
        #12

        @julian @mat

        We implemented this standard and you can create / describe your rooms [Place, `redaktor:fictional`] and the chessboard is just a geohash as described in the geosocial CG so the use is the same, just `redaktor:fictional` too,
        You load the Collection of Chessfigures (pawn1 ...) can name them, they `Travel` over the chessboard ant the `Arrive` describes the `result`.
        As always you can get very detailed with wikidata properties and entities but bare AS Vocabulary is enough.
        In the end you have a Collection for the Travels which is your played game which you can replay or do whatever with.

        But you can still install immers - it is worth a try https://github.com/immers-space

        The reason for its end are the same as for the gup.pe groups and I hope people konw about it โ€ฆ

        Matthew ExonM 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • Sebastian LasseS Sebastian Lasse

          @julian @mat

          We implemented this standard and you can create / describe your rooms [Place, `redaktor:fictional`] and the chessboard is just a geohash as described in the geosocial CG so the use is the same, just `redaktor:fictional` too,
          You load the Collection of Chessfigures (pawn1 ...) can name them, they `Travel` over the chessboard ant the `Arrive` describes the `result`.
          As always you can get very detailed with wikidata properties and entities but bare AS Vocabulary is enough.
          In the end you have a Collection for the Travels which is your played game which you can replay or do whatever with.

          But you can still install immers - it is worth a try https://github.com/immers-space

          The reason for its end are the same as for the gup.pe groups and I hope people konw about it โ€ฆ

          Matthew ExonM This user is from outside of this forum
          Matthew ExonM This user is from outside of this forum
          Matthew Exon
          wrote last edited by
          #13

          @sl007 @julian I admit I didn't pay attention to immers at the time - I don't play games, not even chess. I was just using chess as an example, didn't mean to trigger anyone's trauma!

          Still, it kinda proves my point. You have to use standard AS vocabulary because Mastodon, and if you squint then sure, Travel and Arrive, why not? But given some of the conversations I've seen on this forum, I shudder to think how that would go down if you tried to get approval for that usage from "the community" first.

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          • Luke KaniesL This user is from outside of this forum
            Luke KaniesL This user is from outside of this forum
            Luke Kanies
            wrote last edited by
            #14

            @hongminhee @jalefkowit huh. Iโ€™ve been pondering using it for some projects of mine, so this is good to know.

            Is it a fundamental problem with JSON-LD, such that it should just be avoided, or a problem with how ActivityPub uses it?

            And is there something else youโ€™d recommend that fulfills the same goals?

            ๆดช ๆฐ‘ๆ†™ (Hong Minhee) :nonbinary:H 1 Reply Last reply
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            • Luke KaniesL Luke Kanies

              @hongminhee @jalefkowit huh. Iโ€™ve been pondering using it for some projects of mine, so this is good to know.

              Is it a fundamental problem with JSON-LD, such that it should just be avoided, or a problem with how ActivityPub uses it?

              And is there something else youโ€™d recommend that fulfills the same goals?

              ๆดช ๆฐ‘ๆ†™ (Hong Minhee) :nonbinary:H This user is from outside of this forum
              ๆดช ๆฐ‘ๆ†™ (Hong Minhee) :nonbinary:H This user is from outside of this forum
              ๆดช ๆฐ‘ๆ†™ (Hong Minhee) :nonbinary:
              wrote last edited by
              #15

              @lkanies@hachyderm.io @jalefkowit@vmst.io To be honest, I'm not too sure myself. I just know that JSON-LD was originally planned as a foundation for the Semantic Web. I can only guess that if ontology is useful in a certain area, then JSON-LD would probably be useful there too.

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              • Evan ProdromouE This user is from outside of this forum
                Evan ProdromouE This user is from outside of this forum
                Evan Prodromou
                wrote last edited by
                #16

                @hongminhee do you use the activitystrea.ms module from npm? It takes a lot of the pain out.

                ๆดช ๆฐ‘ๆ†™ (Hong Minhee) :nonbinary:H 1 Reply Last reply
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                • Evan ProdromouE Evan Prodromou

                  @hongminhee do you use the activitystrea.ms module from npm? It takes a lot of the pain out.

                  ๆดช ๆฐ‘ๆ†™ (Hong Minhee) :nonbinary:H This user is from outside of this forum
                  ๆดช ๆฐ‘ๆ†™ (Hong Minhee) :nonbinary:H This user is from outside of this forum
                  ๆดช ๆฐ‘ๆ†™ (Hong Minhee) :nonbinary:
                  wrote last edited by
                  #17

                  @evan@cosocial.ca I don't remember exactly, but I think I came across it while doing research before developing Fedify. I probably didn't use it because the TypeScript type definitions were missing. In the end, I ended up making something similar in Fedify anyway.

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                  • Doug WebbD This user is from outside of this forum
                    Doug WebbD This user is from outside of this forum
                    Doug Webb
                    wrote last edited by
                    #18

                    @pintoch read this thread?

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                    • kopper :colon_three:K This user is from outside of this forum
                      kopper :colon_three:K This user is from outside of this forum
                      kopper :colon_three:
                      wrote last edited by
                      #19
                      @hongminhee from the point of view of someone who is "maintaining" a JSON-LD processing fedi software and has implemented their own JSON-LD processing library (which is, to my knowledge, the fastest in it's programming language), JSON-LD is pure overhead. there is nothing it allows for that can't be done with

                      1. making fields which take multiple values explicit
                      2. always using namespaces and letting HTTP compression take care of minimizing the transfer

                      without JSON-LD, fedi software could use zero-ish-copy deserialization for a majority of their objects (when strings aren't escaped) through tools like serde_json and Cow<str>, or
                      System.Text.Json.JsonDocument. JSON-LD processing effectively mandates a JSON node DOM (in the algorithms standardized, you may be able to get rid of it with Clever Programming)

                      additionally, due to JSON-LD 1.1 features like @type:@json, you can not even fetch contexts in parallel, meaning all JSON-LD code has to be async (in the languages which has the concept), potentially losing out on significant optimizations that can't be done in coroutines due to various reasons (e.g. C# async methods can't have ref structs, Rust async functions usually require thread safety due to tokio's prevalence, even if they're ran in a single-threaded runtime)

                      this is
                      after context processing introducing network dependency to the deserialization of data, wasting time and data on non-server cases (e.g. activitypub C2S). sure you can cache individual contexts, but then the context can change underneath you, desynchronizing your cached context and, in the worst case, opening you up to security vulnerabilities

                      json-ld is not my favorite part of this protocol
                      kopper :colon_three:K Sebastian LasseS 2 Replies Last reply
                      1
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                      • kopper :colon_three:K kopper :colon_three:
                        @hongminhee from the point of view of someone who is "maintaining" a JSON-LD processing fedi software and has implemented their own JSON-LD processing library (which is, to my knowledge, the fastest in it's programming language), JSON-LD is pure overhead. there is nothing it allows for that can't be done with

                        1. making fields which take multiple values explicit
                        2. always using namespaces and letting HTTP compression take care of minimizing the transfer

                        without JSON-LD, fedi software could use zero-ish-copy deserialization for a majority of their objects (when strings aren't escaped) through tools like serde_json and Cow<str>, or
                        System.Text.Json.JsonDocument. JSON-LD processing effectively mandates a JSON node DOM (in the algorithms standardized, you may be able to get rid of it with Clever Programming)

                        additionally, due to JSON-LD 1.1 features like @type:@json, you can not even fetch contexts in parallel, meaning all JSON-LD code has to be async (in the languages which has the concept), potentially losing out on significant optimizations that can't be done in coroutines due to various reasons (e.g. C# async methods can't have ref structs, Rust async functions usually require thread safety due to tokio's prevalence, even if they're ran in a single-threaded runtime)

                        this is
                        after context processing introducing network dependency to the deserialization of data, wasting time and data on non-server cases (e.g. activitypub C2S). sure you can cache individual contexts, but then the context can change underneath you, desynchronizing your cached context and, in the worst case, opening you up to security vulnerabilities

                        json-ld is not my favorite part of this protocol
                        kopper :colon_three:K This user is from outside of this forum
                        kopper :colon_three:K This user is from outside of this forum
                        kopper :colon_three:
                        wrote last edited by
                        #20
                        @hongminhee take this part with a grain of salt because my benchmarks for it are with dotNetRdf which is the slowest C# implementation i know of (hence my replacement library), but JSON-LD is slower than RSA validation, which is one of the pain points around authorized fetch scalability

                        wetdry.world/@kopper/114678924693500011
                        kopper :colon_three:K 2 Replies Last reply
                        1
                        0
                        • kopper :colon_three:K kopper :colon_three:
                          @hongminhee take this part with a grain of salt because my benchmarks for it are with dotNetRdf which is the slowest C# implementation i know of (hence my replacement library), but JSON-LD is slower than RSA validation, which is one of the pain points around authorized fetch scalability

                          wetdry.world/@kopper/114678924693500011
                          kopper :colon_three:K This user is from outside of this forum
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                          kopper :colon_three:
                          wrote last edited by
                          #21
                          @hongminhee if i can give one piece of advice to devs who want to process JSON-LD: dont bother compacting. you already know the schema you output (or you're just passing through what the user gives and it doesn't matter to you), serialize directly to the compacted representation, and only run expansion on incoming data

                          expansion is the cheapest JSON-LD operation (since all other operations depend on it and run it internally anyhow), and this will get you all the compatibility benefits of JSON-LD with little downsides (beyond more annoying deserialization code, as you have to map the expanded representation to your internal structure which will likely be modeled after the compacted one)
                          pancake :butterfly_:โ€‹:neofox_lesbian:N infinite love โดณT 2 Replies Last reply
                          1
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                          • kopper :colon_three:K kopper :colon_three:
                            @hongminhee if i can give one piece of advice to devs who want to process JSON-LD: dont bother compacting. you already know the schema you output (or you're just passing through what the user gives and it doesn't matter to you), serialize directly to the compacted representation, and only run expansion on incoming data

                            expansion is the cheapest JSON-LD operation (since all other operations depend on it and run it internally anyhow), and this will get you all the compatibility benefits of JSON-LD with little downsides (beyond more annoying deserialization code, as you have to map the expanded representation to your internal structure which will likely be modeled after the compacted one)
                            pancake :butterfly_:โ€‹:neofox_lesbian:N This user is from outside of this forum
                            pancake :butterfly_:โ€‹:neofox_lesbian:N This user is from outside of this forum
                            pancake :butterfly_:โ€‹:neofox_lesbian:
                            wrote last edited by
                            #22

                            @kopper@not-brain.d.on-t.work @hongminhee@hollo.social expansion is actually really annoying because the resulting JSON has annoyingly similar keys to lookup in a hashmap, wasting cache lines, and CPU time

                            kopper :colon_three:K 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • pancake :butterfly_:โ€‹:neofox_lesbian:N pancake :butterfly_:โ€‹:neofox_lesbian:

                              @kopper@not-brain.d.on-t.work @hongminhee@hollo.social expansion is actually really annoying because the resulting JSON has annoyingly similar keys to lookup in a hashmap, wasting cache lines, and CPU time

                              kopper :colon_three:K This user is from outside of this forum
                              kopper :colon_three:K This user is from outside of this forum
                              kopper :colon_three:
                              wrote last edited by
                              #23
                              @natty @hongminhee i would imagine a Good hash algorithm wouldn't care about the similarity of the keys, no?
                              1 Reply Last reply
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                              • kopper :colon_three:K kopper :colon_three:
                                @hongminhee take this part with a grain of salt because my benchmarks for it are with dotNetRdf which is the slowest C# implementation i know of (hence my replacement library), but JSON-LD is slower than RSA validation, which is one of the pain points around authorized fetch scalability

                                wetdry.world/@kopper/114678924693500011
                                kopper :colon_three:K This user is from outside of this forum
                                kopper :colon_three:K This user is from outside of this forum
                                kopper :colon_three:
                                wrote last edited by
                                #24
                                @hongminhee i put this in a quote but people reading the thread may also be interested: json-ld compaction does not really save that much bandwidth over having all the prefixes explicitly defined if you're gzipping (and you are gzipping, right? this is json. make sure your nginx gzip_types includes ld+json and activity+json)

                                RE:
                                not-brain.d.on-t.work/notes/aihftmbjpxdyb9k7
                                1 Reply Last reply
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                                • kopper :colon_three:K kopper :colon_three:
                                  @hongminhee from the point of view of someone who is "maintaining" a JSON-LD processing fedi software and has implemented their own JSON-LD processing library (which is, to my knowledge, the fastest in it's programming language), JSON-LD is pure overhead. there is nothing it allows for that can't be done with

                                  1. making fields which take multiple values explicit
                                  2. always using namespaces and letting HTTP compression take care of minimizing the transfer

                                  without JSON-LD, fedi software could use zero-ish-copy deserialization for a majority of their objects (when strings aren't escaped) through tools like serde_json and Cow<str>, or
                                  System.Text.Json.JsonDocument. JSON-LD processing effectively mandates a JSON node DOM (in the algorithms standardized, you may be able to get rid of it with Clever Programming)

                                  additionally, due to JSON-LD 1.1 features like @type:@json, you can not even fetch contexts in parallel, meaning all JSON-LD code has to be async (in the languages which has the concept), potentially losing out on significant optimizations that can't be done in coroutines due to various reasons (e.g. C# async methods can't have ref structs, Rust async functions usually require thread safety due to tokio's prevalence, even if they're ran in a single-threaded runtime)

                                  this is
                                  after context processing introducing network dependency to the deserialization of data, wasting time and data on non-server cases (e.g. activitypub C2S). sure you can cache individual contexts, but then the context can change underneath you, desynchronizing your cached context and, in the worst case, opening you up to security vulnerabilities

                                  json-ld is not my favorite part of this protocol
                                  Sebastian LasseS This user is from outside of this forum
                                  Sebastian LasseS This user is from outside of this forum
                                  Sebastian Lasse
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #25

                                  @kopper
                                  @julian
                                  @hongminhee

                                  hm, we really need to differentiate between users responsibility and dev responsibility.

                                  Not sure if Hong saw the draft about the AP kv thing, it supports either JSON-LD fields _or_ as:attachment / as:context โ€ฆ
                                  wtf do I want to say.

                                  user story:
                                  We are working on 2 major and 3 projects fulltime which is
                                  - federation of wikibase / wikidata
                                  - federation of Public Broadcasters https://www.publicmediaalliance.org/public-broadcasters-create-public-spaces-incubator/
                                  and these https://codeberg.org/Menschys/fedi-codebase

                                  Let's say we want to federate a Country, then all the knowledge is sent in `attachment` with the fully qualified qikidata url in `context` [as:context - not @context ! - this is so confusing :)]
                                  For example the according entries from the PressFreedomIndex `collection` (co-founder of freelens here ๐Ÿ™‚

                                  But anyway, the idea about having
                                  "wd": "https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Special:EntityData/",
                                  "wdt": "https://www.wikidata.org/prop/direct/" in the `@context` was that any user can consume and federate wikibase
                                  incl.
                                  ๐Ÿงต 1/2

                                  Sebastian LasseS 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • Sebastian LasseS Sebastian Lasse

                                    @kopper
                                    @julian
                                    @hongminhee

                                    hm, we really need to differentiate between users responsibility and dev responsibility.

                                    Not sure if Hong saw the draft about the AP kv thing, it supports either JSON-LD fields _or_ as:attachment / as:context โ€ฆ
                                    wtf do I want to say.

                                    user story:
                                    We are working on 2 major and 3 projects fulltime which is
                                    - federation of wikibase / wikidata
                                    - federation of Public Broadcasters https://www.publicmediaalliance.org/public-broadcasters-create-public-spaces-incubator/
                                    and these https://codeberg.org/Menschys/fedi-codebase

                                    Let's say we want to federate a Country, then all the knowledge is sent in `attachment` with the fully qualified qikidata url in `context` [as:context - not @context ! - this is so confusing :)]
                                    For example the according entries from the PressFreedomIndex `collection` (co-founder of freelens here ๐Ÿ™‚

                                    But anyway, the idea about having
                                    "wd": "https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Special:EntityData/",
                                    "wdt": "https://www.wikidata.org/prop/direct/" in the `@context` was that any user can consume and federate wikibase
                                    incl.
                                    ๐Ÿงต 1/2

                                    Sebastian LasseS This user is from outside of this forum
                                    Sebastian LasseS This user is from outside of this forum
                                    Sebastian Lasse
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #26

                                    @kopper @julian @hongminhee

                                    incl.
                                    - the properties in all the languages of the world
                                    - the knowledge of the world in all the languages
                                    - the wikidata relations and qualified statements including the nameMap etc. and all the urls to all wikiprojects incl. their languages and knowledge

                                    How else could I say to other softwares if they want all users qualified data, use wikidata vocabulary?
                                    wikipedia, wikidata, EBU, Public Broadcasters, taxi data is _all_ JSON-LD โ€ฆ

                                    kopper :colon_three:K 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • Sebastian LasseS Sebastian Lasse

                                      @kopper @julian @hongminhee

                                      incl.
                                      - the properties in all the languages of the world
                                      - the knowledge of the world in all the languages
                                      - the wikidata relations and qualified statements including the nameMap etc. and all the urls to all wikiprojects incl. their languages and knowledge

                                      How else could I say to other softwares if they want all users qualified data, use wikidata vocabulary?
                                      wikipedia, wikidata, EBU, Public Broadcasters, taxi data is _all_ JSON-LD โ€ฆ

                                      kopper :colon_three:K This user is from outside of this forum
                                      kopper :colon_three:K This user is from outside of this forum
                                      kopper :colon_three:
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #27
                                      @sl007 @hongminhee @julian i feel like you're falling into a trap i've seen a lot around AP spaces: just because the data can be contorted to represent something does not mean software will interpret it as such.

                                      any software who wants to support wikidata statements and relations will have to go out of their way to implement that manually with or without json-ld in the mix, and interoperability between those software will have to specify how that works. and in your specification you can indeed make it so Simply Linking to the wikidata json-ld (which i don't believe it provides out of the box, it does for xml and n-triples, if we're talking about rdf. if not,
                                      their bespoke json format is just as authoritative) can work (but i'd say using the Qxxx and Pxx IDs and letting the software figure out how to access it would be better!)

                                      if you have the dream of making an as:Note and having it's as:attributedTo be the wikidata entity for alan turing... sorry, nobody other than maybe your own software will even attempt interpreting that
                                      kopper :colon_three:K 1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • kopper :colon_three:K kopper :colon_three:
                                        @sl007 @hongminhee @julian i feel like you're falling into a trap i've seen a lot around AP spaces: just because the data can be contorted to represent something does not mean software will interpret it as such.

                                        any software who wants to support wikidata statements and relations will have to go out of their way to implement that manually with or without json-ld in the mix, and interoperability between those software will have to specify how that works. and in your specification you can indeed make it so Simply Linking to the wikidata json-ld (which i don't believe it provides out of the box, it does for xml and n-triples, if we're talking about rdf. if not,
                                        their bespoke json format is just as authoritative) can work (but i'd say using the Qxxx and Pxx IDs and letting the software figure out how to access it would be better!)

                                        if you have the dream of making an as:Note and having it's as:attributedTo be the wikidata entity for alan turing... sorry, nobody other than maybe your own software will even attempt interpreting that
                                        kopper :colon_three:K This user is from outside of this forum
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                                        kopper :colon_three:
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #28
                                        @hongminhee @sl007 @julian attempting to support this kind of "data contortion" (i made this up and prolly isnt the right way to describe this) would rapidly balloon the scope of every fedi software ever. i don't believe anyone would want to develop for such ecosystem

                                        a similar example i saw was someone attempting to explain how you can partially inline an as:object you as:Like'd in order to specify you only liked that past version of it and if it changed your like shouldn't count. without describing this exact scenario i don't believe any software, json-ld capable or not, would interpret that Like as such. same thing with the long-form text FEP which attempts to support non-activitypub authors
                                        Sebastian LasseS 1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • kopper :colon_three:K kopper :colon_three:
                                          @hongminhee @sl007 @julian attempting to support this kind of "data contortion" (i made this up and prolly isnt the right way to describe this) would rapidly balloon the scope of every fedi software ever. i don't believe anyone would want to develop for such ecosystem

                                          a similar example i saw was someone attempting to explain how you can partially inline an as:object you as:Like'd in order to specify you only liked that past version of it and if it changed your like shouldn't count. without describing this exact scenario i don't believe any software, json-ld capable or not, would interpret that Like as such. same thing with the long-form text FEP which attempts to support non-activitypub authors
                                          Sebastian LasseS This user is from outside of this forum
                                          Sebastian LasseS This user is from outside of this forum
                                          Sebastian Lasse
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #29

                                          @kopper @hongminhee @julian

                                          it is just damned simple, your as: Client can do so much by asking wikidata, OSM, federated geocoding and not our system. When you use a property for the first time, the client can cache its names in the languages of the user etc.

                                          kopper :colon_three:K 1 Reply Last reply
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