Skip to main content
 

Tired: heading to the fediverse

Wired: heading to fidonet

· Statuses · Share this post

 

A Mastodon introduction

Here’s what I wrote on my Mastodon profile to (re-)introduce myself to the fediverse:

Hi! I'm Ben Werdmuller. I've been a blogger since 1998. These days I post regularly at werd.io. Writing is my first love, and I'm working on a novel.

I founded two FOSS social platforms (Elgg and Known), worked at a mission-driven investor, worked at Medium, and was Geek in Residence at Edinburgh Festivals. Today I'm CTO at The 19th (19thnews.org), a women-led newsroom that reports on gender, politics and policy.

If you’re on Mastodon, or any other Fediverse-capable site, add me at @ben@werd.social.

· Posts · Share this post

 

If I had a startup right now, I’d be trying my hardest to hire ex-Twitter employees. But honestly, I hope a bunch of them start their own, learning from what they know now.

· Statuses · Share this post

 

· Photos · Share this post

 

Voting on the indieweb

If you’re an American citizen, you should vote in next week’s election. Maybe you already have: I sent in my mail-in ballot, which is by far the easiest and most convenient way to do your democratic duty, as well as the best way to vote while researching your choices. (All of which is probably why so many people want to do away with it.)

I was asked a while back if there was an indieweb solution for adding a widget on your website to help people register to vote. I wish this was an easier problem to solve than it is: because every jurisdiction has different voting infrastructure that doesn’t adhere to any reliably shared principles or standards, there’s no open source way to make this work without staying on top of every single voting portal. There are proprietary embeds to make this work - notably from vote.org - but they offer very few customization options and essentially require a full-page takeover. To customize more fully, you need to pay: a way for the underlying nonprofit to pay its bills, but counter to the mission of getting more people to register.

It seems to me that it would be in the interests of political parties to create simple voter registration tools and make it as easy as possible to integrate them into your site or app. Let people register as easily as possible, and direct them to the voting option that’s best for them, all from the websites and apps they’re already using. (And then, perhaps, track their registration automatically so they know if it was rejected for some reason.) Democracy is strongest when every citizen can use their democratic right to vote.

I’m not a govtech guy, but I’m aware this is pie in the sky thinking. Still: the best way to make this happen would be to create a single standard for election registration. Provide a single interface standard and a set of APIs that all local election portals must implement, then make it incredibly easy for them to do so by providing libraries and open source software. The current, standards-less, highly-federated way government software works is ludicrous, and can only lead to a bad citizen experience. Not everyone needs to use the same software, but surely it should be possible to get states to agree to some base technical standards, in the same way they all now use HTTP and HTML.

This post is mostly brought to you by anxiety about the election. I feel powerless to stop what I think is almost inevitably going to happen. Please, please, please, please vote.

· Posts · Share this post

 

The Dangers of Context Collapse

“Context collapse itself is the phenomenon of highly-contextual information being used, purposefully or otherwise, in an ambiguous manner which leads to confusion.” Great post on a common rhetorical weapon.

[Link]

· Links · Share this post

 

If you're a journalist or newsroom, how are you approaching changes at Twitter? What are your contingencies? (Asking as me, not on behalf of my employer.)

· Statuses · Share this post

 

When people on Twitter complain about their "free speech" being violated, they're literally only talking about content that harasses and calls for violence on vulnerable people. It's not good faith discourse and it's not an impulse the tech industry should capitulate to.

· Statuses · Share this post

 

Pasadena school becomes nation’s first named after Octavia Butler

“Everyone said, ‘She’s a seer and she’s prescient, but she … just paid attention. She was always tuned into the climate crisis and doing research on that. It’s almost as if we’ve caught up with her finally.””

[Link]

· Links · Share this post

 

Tech folks: unions are really good.

· Statuses · Share this post

 

My baby had a nightmare, and his expression when he woke up to find it wasn’t real was effervescent.

I’d been dreaming about the time my middle school science teacher berated students whose parents didn’t buy books at home and felt the same way.

· Statuses · Share this post

 

How much press are you worth?

“This website calculates your press value based on current reporting in America, to expose bias and to advocate for change.” I would be worth a below-average 17 stories if I went missing.

[Link]

· Links · Share this post

 

Ian Coldwater on Twitter: "Dotcom crash survivors, what is your actionable advice for people?"

A great thread of advice for younger engineers in a recession, from people who survived previous tech downturns.

[Link]

· Links · Share this post

 

How Is Slavery Still Legal?

“What’s disturbing is that not only do the “tough on crime” types believe in prison slavery, but even liberals like Gavin Newsom can’t be counted on to oppose it. But it’s up to the rest of us, those with a functioning moral compass, to work to eradicate slavery once and for all.”

[Link]

· Links · Share this post

 

Mozilla Ventures: Investing in Responsible Tech

“Mozilla Ventures will be a $35M+ venture capital fund for early stage startups whose products or technologies advance one or more of the values in the Mozilla Manifesto. Privacy. Inclusion. Transparency. Accessibility. Human dignity.” YES!

[Link]

· Links · Share this post

 

Wondering if / when the carbon footprint of AI will overtake the carbon footprint of blockchain.

· Statuses · Share this post

 

How to Build A Winning Paid Membership Program

“Chinese platforms have been experimenting with paid membership models for over a decade and offer new frameworks for the West to consider. They are also a great source of ideas for individual features that are universal.”

[Link]

· Links · Share this post

 

Oregon tried to publicize wildfire risk. The backlash was explosive.

““A lot of people were just, you know, shocked,” Chaisson told Grist. “The big thing that people think of is, you know, the worst-case scenario, which is losing your insurance and having your property taken away.”” Obvious room for benefits for people whose homes fall in high-risk zones.

[Link]

· Links · Share this post

 

· Photos · Share this post

 

The full lineup for our Future of the Workforce event in Austin this month is pretty amazing. It's free to attend in person and online. If you're coming in person, I'll see you there! https://19thnews.org/events/future-of-the-workforce-austin-texas/

· Statuses · Share this post

 

Military spouses bear the financial, logistical impact of frequent moves

“Manjarres, a nurse, said a lot of the household stress, including the moves, falls on her. Her husband’s high rank requires he leave for deployments regularly and for long periods of time, making it difficult for her to find employment at each of their stations, depending on the size of the military base and the needs of her growing children. Her husband missed her son’s whole first grade year, she said.”

[Link]

· Links · Share this post

 

Prediction: if the fediverse continues to succeed, someone will build a Google-style centralized full-text search engine that also allows you to post and reply from your federated profile, and we'll all use it.

· Statuses · Share this post

 

I feel like there's a really good joke that ends with (Taylor's Version Control) but I can't quite find it.

· Statuses · Share this post

 

I gave myself the gift of not doing NaNoWriMo with a two month old baby and a full time job. But the bigger writing project continues apace.

· Statuses · Share this post

 

Ray Bradbury on feeding your creativity

“He said that nothing is lost and you must resist the urge to throw out things that meant so much to you when you were younger. What is most important, he writes, is “the continual running after loves.””

[Link]

· Links · Share this post