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-(post
- :title "Find Me on Diaspora"
- :date (make-date* 2013 06 30)
- :tags '("foss" "diaspora" "federated" "decentralized" "rails" "wsu")
- :summary "I have started using and contributing to Diaspora."
-
- (p [With all of the recent news about the NSA’s widespread spying, I
-have decided to ween myself off of proprietary, centralized web
-services. Facebook, Google, and other such corporations hold onto
-massive amounts of our data that we’ve willingly given to them via
-status messages, “like” buttons, searches, and emails. Using and
-contributing to free (as in freedom), decentralized (like email) web
-services is a really great way to re-establish control of our data.
-These services rely on many small, interconnected nodes to operate,
-rather than a monolithic website that is under the control of one
-entity. If the distinction between centralized and decentralized
-isn’t clear, consider how email functions. There are many email
-providers to choose from. Users can communicate with others that
-choose to use a different email provider. This is how web services
-should work, but unfortunately very few work this way now.])
-
- (p [The centralized web application that I spend too much time using
-is Facebook. I have knowingly given Facebook a “frontdoor” into my
-life for years now and I’m ready to move on. I think that the concept
-of a “social network” is fun, so I wanted a Facebook replacement.
-Fortunately, there is one:
-,(anchor [Diaspora] "http://diasporaproject.org/").])
-
- (p [Diaspora is a
-,(anchor [free] "https://github.com/diaspora/diaspora"),
-distributed, social networking web application written in Ruby using
-the Rails framework. Diaspora is a community-run project. Its success
-depends upon users, developers, technical writers, user interface
-designers, etc. investing their time and/or money into making it
-better. The Diaspora network is broken up into many servers, known as
-,(anchor [pods] "http://podupti.me").
-Users have the choice of which pod to store their data on.
-Pods assert no ownership over their user’s data, unlike Facebook, and
-do not use that data for targeted advertisements. Diaspora is still a
-rather young project, but it does everything that I need it to
-do. Goodbye, Facebook!])
-
- (p [Since I’m a programmer, I naturally wanted to hack on some code and
-contribute. The main developers are very friendly and give great
-guidance to newcomers that want to help out. Every Monday is a “Bug
-Mash Monday”, where a list of open issues is presented to entice
-contributors to resolve them. In the past few weeks, I have made two
-contributions to the Diaspora project: a
-,(anchor [bug fix] "https://github.com/diaspora/diaspora/issues/2948")
-and a
-,(anchor [small feature] "https://github.com/diaspora/diaspora/issues/2948").
-Diaspora is very hackable and I encourage other developers
-with Ruby/Rails and Javascript knowledge to join in.])
-
- (p [TL\;R: Diaspora is great. Create an account. Check out my
-,(anchor [profile] "https://joindiaspora.com/u/davexunit").
-Start sharing. Happy hacking. :\)]))