Fediverse

See also: fediverse

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

Blend of federation +‎ universe. The earliest known mention of fediverse on Twitter was in 2012.[1] The earliest known use of fediverse by the W3C was in 2013.[2]

Pronunciation

Proper noun

the Fediverse

  1. (Internet) The distributed social media network of federated services using open standard communication protocols, especially ActivityPub and historically OStatus. [from 2012]
    • 2020, Jessica Megarry, The Limitations of Social Media Feminism: No Space of Our Own, Springer Nature, →ISBN, page 303:
      While there is clearly a strong appetite amongst women to move away from the digital giants, Spinster is hardly free from their reach, or indeed from hostile men within the wider Fediverse network.
    • 2022, “Decentralized networks vs the trolls”, in Hoda Mahmoudi et al., editors, Fundamental Challenges to Global Peace and Security, Springer Nature, →ISBN, page 149:
      The migration of Gab marked a major test for the Fediverse. Because no one authority controlled the policies of the network, it would be impossible to bar Gab with a single sweeping action, the way centralized social networks such as Facebook or Twitter might.
    • 2022 November 14, Will Knight, “The Man Behind Mastodon Built It for This Moment”, in Wired[2], →ISSN:
      Instead of creating a single unified platform, the the[sic] protocol that Mastodon uses, called ActivityPub, allows anyone to use open-source software to boot up a server that hosts a Twitter-style community with its own rules. Together those servers, and other, non-Mastodon ones, form a collective of interlinked communities dubbed the “Fediverse.”

Usage notes

  • Historically, the terms The Fediverse, The Federation and The Free Network have been used interchangeably. Over time with the evolution of various social web protocols, The Fediverse has increasingly been adapted to uniquely refer specifically to the growing ActivityPub network. The other terms are more general and may encompass various protocols.
  • There is no definitive consensus on the capitalisation of the name; similar to the word Internet. Both Fediverse and fediverse are commonly used.

Translations

References

  1. ^ Mark Eckenwiler (25 May 2012) Twitter[1], archived from the original on 10 December 2022:@IMGoph Fully accessible from my part of the fediverse
  2. ^ Mikael Nordfeldth (26 October 2013) “Re: Federated Social Web 2013 in Europe?”, in Federated Social Web Community Group:We're a bunch of folks in the OStatus fediverse (StatusNet/GNU social) that will attend.