XSF Discussion - 2020-10-07


  1. dwd

    They are issues. But they're issues that apply to any generic approach, and the argument is therefore that he doesn't want to solve this problem, which I agree with.

  2. dwd

    I mean, the argument essentially is that given any generic approach, it is possible to find a case where the generic solution does not apply. That is perfectly true. But the alternative is to have every case hard coded into the server, which I contend isn't viable as a solution.

  3. dwd

    What I haven't said is that the arguments are badly written or written solely as an attack on me, or that the author has no idea about the problem domain.

  4. wurstsalat

    Maybe a small voice conference meeting with you three could resolve most of these issues? At the moment it's a lot 'talk about talk'.

  5. Zash

    Bring back AFK Summit

  6. dwd

    Why? It's pointless. There's literally no interest in solving the problem outside of me and Kev.

  7. jonas’

    dwd, larma seems to be interested, too.

  8. dwd

    jonas’, No, he's explicitly not interested in any kind of generic solution.

  9. dwd

    jonas’, That's abundantly clear, and explicitly stated.

  10. jonas’

    right, however, they’re interested in a solution for reactions

  11. larma

    dwd, my problem is not that the generic solution has some issues, but that the generic solution that was proposed doesn't work for the few use cases we already have in mind

  12. dwd

    larma, Sure.

  13. Kev

    Maybe it would be interesting to see what a specialised solution would look like, and try to extract the generic from there, if starting with the generic is generating too much heat.

  14. larma

    And had you read my gist you might have spotted that I wrote about one way I could imagine to solve this while staying generic

  15. Zash

    I'm not entirely convinced that a generic solution is the best place to start.

  16. dwd

    larma, Neither of your proposals works.

  17. dwd

    larma, But I'm just out of energy to solve the problem within the XSF now. There's other problems I can work on that might yield more useful results.

  18. larma

    funny, because one of the main reasons this topic had become an active discussion within the XSF (again) is that it was decided that we can't move forward with some other, mostly unrelated parts of the protocol before solving this issue

  19. dwd

    larma, As I say, I have exhausted my energy here.

  20. pep.

    so should council finally accept reactions?

  21. dwd

    I honestly don't know. Fundamentally, the problems the last Council highlighted with the general pattern still exist and remain unaddressed, and nobody wants to solve them in the XSF.

  22. jonas’

    then move ahead with it as experimental and treat it as experimental

  23. jonas’

    in the sense that it’ll be broken when it needs to be broken

  24. dwd

    jonas’, You argued in the Council meeting when MAM-FC came up a couple of weeks back that I should not implement MAM-FC as it would form a de-facto standard while Experimental. I take it Reactions would not fall into that same argument, then?

  25. Kev

    Ah, and I left the room at that point.

  26. Kev

    Maybe if larma is saying that he *does* want to work on a generic solution (i.e. one that doesn't require per-protocol support or rules on the server) a sensible step would be to see what that looks like.

  27. Kev

    e.g. what an update to 427 looked like that resolved his issues with it, without introducing per-protocol rules.

  28. Zash

    As a server dev, I don't like keeping track of per-protocol rules, but it seems we can't avoid it.

  29. pep.

    Zash: as any dev :p

  30. Zash

    Heh

  31. dwd

    pep., No, there's two issues that are key for servers here. One is that the server would have to do "deep stanza inspection", for want of a better phrase, and actually understand the semantics of various cases such as reactions, receipts, and so on.

  32. dwd

    pep., That has an effect both on maintenance, which as you have alluded affects any developer, and also scalability.

  33. larma

    Kev, I proposed two ways in the gist. One is fully generic but restricted in what it can summarize (but less than the current approach), the other one is generic but with _optional_ per-protocol summary rules (and if there is no such rule for a protocol or the server doesn't support it, it still works just not as good as it could with specialized rules)

  34. Zash

    Prosodys MAM, Carbons and CSI modules contain loooong chains of rules now, so doing the same for MAM-FC etc does not seem unlikely

  35. dwd

    pep., But there's also the problem that with each new collation pattern, the server developer may have to introduce a new data model within the MAM archive, and that concerns me much more - I have several million rows in my archive, and I need to access those efficiently. Migrating from one data model to another takes days, currently.

  36. larma

    Zash, the current MAM-FC proposal already contains special handling for some protocols anyway ("pseudo fastenings"), so I guess this is going to happen anyway, no matter how generic the approach 😉

  37. pep.

    what larma says

  38. dwd

    pep., What larma says is that the first problem I mentioned may be with us to stay, but says nothing about the second.

  39. dwd

    But as I say, no further energy for this.

  40. pep.

    Well unless you find the perfectly generic solution right away there's no escaping from this

  41. dwd

    von Clausevitz.

  42. pep.

    Seems like some lesser form of solutionism to me

  43. dwd

    Besides, my escape is to not bother trying to standardize a solution.

  44. dwd

    And before anyone criticises me for that - nor is anyone else.

  45. pep.

    Sure

  46. pep.

    Let us at least use reactions

  47. larma was attempted to open movim just to put a 👍️ reaction on that message, but then realized probably nobody except edhelas will notice

  48. pep.

    tbh I'm not even personally going to use them

  49. dwd

    You say that like I am personally preventing you.

  50. pep.

    Just that I don't understand why that's not experimental yet

  51. pep.

    Just as 393 is experimental

  52. jonas’

    larma, I told you, fallback body!!k

  53. pep.

    Maybe I'm just being dull in trying to cling onto the few hopes I have to do something with the XSF, dunno. Maybe it's better for everybody to just do stuff on their own after all

  54. pep.

    Which is exactly what I understand from "You say that like I am personally preventing you."

  55. Zash

    What about rough consensus and running code?

  56. pep.

    Running code is there

  57. Ge0rG

    > It is expected that clients will not send message corrections to clients that do not support them, as non-supporting clients will render these as duplicate (corrected) messages. How could that slip into 0307, given Carbons and MAM?

  58. Ge0rG

    > It is expected that clients will not send message corrections to clients that do not support them, as non-supporting clients will render these as duplicate (corrected) messages. How could that slip into 0308, given Carbons and MAM?

  59. Ge0rG

    And should a bridge to a protocol that implements message corrections have a <feature var='urn:xmpp:message-correct:0'/>?

  60. dwd

    pep., I didn't veto Reactions the first time. I did the second, because I didn't think a re-submission was the right thing to do or to encourage at that time - and all of Council agreed (Daniel didn't veto but stated he agreed, everyone else vetoed). Instead, I've actively worked on a solution meeting the criteria of the first rejection, acting in good faith to find a consensus position.

  61. dwd

    pep., From the minutes, this still stands: "The whole situation irritates Dave enormously - who originally voted in favour of Reactions. Dave is willing to give a holding vote, and dig into this further - would really love to have Reactions, and a generic method of 'fastening' would be even better."

  62. pep.

    Well I don't agree with that and I don't see why I wouldn't revert a dumb decision in the first place. We already live with enough dumb decisions that if I have the power to change one I would

  63. Kev

    > One is fully generic but restricted in what it can summarize Ah, your 'option 1'. I was thinking you intended to send that with the fastening, but reading it again did you instead intend the collation types to be requested by the client at mam-fc time?

  64. pep.

    dwd, fwiw it's not against you personally, you just seem to be fairly defensive of the idea of respecting last term's decision for reasons I don't understand (as per my last statement)

  65. dwd

    pep., OK, you don't agree. Everyone on the current Council agreed, four of them vetoed on that basis, one did not. You're on the Board, I'm sure we'd all welcome some clarificaiton on how Council should feel bound or not to decisions of previous Councils. But you're also suggesting the original decision was "dumb", which is simply unnecessary.

  66. Kev

    > How could that slip into 0308, given Carbons and MAM? I think at the time of 308 Carbons wasn't much of a thing, and MAM was entirely not a thing. But, indeed, if we (I) were doing 308 now it would possibly take an entirely different form.

  67. Kev

    > And should a bridge to a protocol that implements message corrections have a <feature var='urn:xmpp:message-correct:0'/> Presumably so, unless I'm being dense (and I'm again not firing on all cylinders, so quite possible).

  68. Ge0rG

    Kev: I'd say it should be announced on user JIDs, but I'm not so sure about bridged rooms.

  69. Ge0rG

    IMHO, a client shouldn't require a MUC to have the 0308 feature to send LMC

  70. Ge0rG

    Kev: if you are okay with it, I'd make a PR for that.

  71. Ge0rG

    also that a client shouldn't require the feature on a recipient

  72. Kev

    > dumb decision Do people understand how using Trump-ish language about other people and their behaviours reduces the chance of a reasonable exchange happening?

  73. dwd

    Kev, You are attributing a goal here that there is no evidence to support.

  74. pep.

    dwd, so that I can see even more people in board thinking the same way you feel? (because now they'd have to voice an opinion) I'd rather not. And also why I'm not reapplying for board anyway. It just won't bend my way, it's mostly a waste of time for me

  75. Kev

    Ge0rG: I *think* it's not the MUC, but rather the occupants, that advertise support for 308 to trigger someone being able to send corrections there.

  76. dwd

    Kev, I suspect those two mean different things - a MUC advertising support might mean the MUC has some semantic understanding, but we don't specify what that might be.

  77. Kev

    Ge0rG: Ah, yes, so the MUC sentence (which might be badly written) suggests it's the occupants that have to support it (recipients was a poor choice of word for me here, I think). It also says that you can send to a MUC if you want to even when not supported.

  78. Ge0rG

    Kev: what would be the logic here? Send LMC if *at least one* occupant has the feature? Only if *all occupants* do? What if somebody joins or leaves while you are typing the correction?

  79. Kev

    dwd: I would agree with that.

  80. Kev

    Ge0rG: What Swift does is just to pop up a small notice saying that not everyone supports it, so their experiences may vary.

  81. Kev

    Which you might argue is horrible UX, but it was the best I could come up with at the time.

  82. Ge0rG

    Kev: that's not too bad of an UX

  83. Ge0rG

    Kev: but a client telling the user that LMC isn't supported when trying to correct a MUC message is

  84. Kev

    I don't think Swift ever actually prevents you from sending a correction, it just warns you that the target will not/might not understand it as a correction.

  85. dwd

    pep., Well, that's a shame, on both counts. Even if Board broadly disagrees with you, it's useful to have a contrary voice in any debate, and useful to clarify the situation with Councils binding, or not, future Councils.

  86. pep.

    I did not apply for board just to play the role of the contrary voice

  87. Kev

    dwd: If I was to send a mail to standards@ with my old Council hat on saying that I would like Council to reconsider Reactions on its own merit with reference to my reasons to -1, but not my -1 itself, would that be in any way useful?

  88. Ge0rG

    Kev: but preventing the user from sending a correction is encouraged by the current 0308 wording.

  89. pep.

    So much process, seriously

  90. Kev

    Ge0rG: If you feel you can make my wording better here (for example by pouring alphabet spaghetti on it and seeing where it lands :) ), I'm entirely open to a PR.

  91. Ge0rG

    Kev: roger

  92. Kev

    308's Draft, but I suspect Council would be amenable to a change that makes things better - there is enough weasel wording in there already to allow this, I think.

  93. Ge0rG

    I think so too.

  94. dwd

    pep., Board defines process. And process should serve us, not rule us. I mean "us" as in the community - it absolutely has to rule Council, that's kind of the point. I've always found Board limited by time and funding, and not by process. As to being a contrary voice, I think you underestimate the utility and importance of it - and if you didn't join to be a contrary voice, you must have expected either everyone else to agree with you or you to agree with everyone else, neither of which sounds like progress.

  95. Kev

    larma: What would your ideal mechanism for collation of reactions in MAM look like (I assert that collation is required, because not all clients will be always-on full-archive-sync jobs). I want to see a Reactions spec accepted, which is why I put the effort in with Dave on fastening/mamfc.

  96. larma

    > Ah, your 'option 1'. I was thinking you intended to send that with the fastening Kev, that's the way I meant it to be, e.g. `<apply-to xmlns="urn:xmpp:fasten:0" id="origin-id-2" rules="only-self">`. Would also be possible the other way round as you suggested: when requesting MAM-FC I include a list of my supported fastenings and their respective collation rules. Or those go into disco somehow, so I don't have to include them with every MAM request.

  97. larma

    I personally prefer the option 2 which IMO will in the end lead to the better results in total, even if that means (optional) additional server-side implementation work for new XEPs.

  98. Zash

    larma: Or do supported collation rules get advertised by the server?

  99. Kev

    So, a mam request would look (heavily pseudocoded) like: <mam> <collations> <edits type=newest filter=authoronly/> <reactions type=count/>

  100. larma

    Zash, well, then there is no need to advertise them and they can just be applied 😉

  101. larma

    Kev, yeah, but then I expect the query is going to be huge at some point

  102. dwd

    larma, In the first case - 1a - a malicious client could probably hide messages from some other clients. In the second, I don't see how an archive data model could be built to support that efficiently - you're asking for GROUP BY semantics in MAM requests.

  103. Kev

    If we got to the point that collation queries were huge, we could probably start saving profiles on the server or something and referencing those. I wonder if we'd ever reach that stage.

  104. Kev

    dwd: Yes, essentially enforcing an SQL pass-through is my concern (although I'm not yet convinced it's as bad as I fear, I need to think further). One thing we could do, though, is have servers only require the official collation for things they understand, and reject queries otherwise. So that you could have a fully-generic server that can do whatever you ask, or if you want to in a specialised environment a server that can only support, say, Reactions and nothing else. We can mandate collation types in the respective XEPs to allow this.

  105. Kev

    The reason that I think having a fully generic option is useful is it allows forwards-compatibility, and as a server vendor (for generic use) I'm not keen on needing to support every collatable-payload explicitly as they're specced (and respecced, etc.).

  106. Kev

    (Which I know you (dwd) realise, but which I say for completeness)

  107. larma

    I am wondering why the option 2 (optional per xep collation) is so off-the-table for you, because to me it seems like the most promising solution

  108. dwd

    Kev, The problem with new collation requirements isn't so much the change in code, but the need to migrate the data model for historical data, to restate.

  109. Kev

    dwd: Well, I think both are an issue for different types of deployment.

  110. Kev

    larma: It's not *completely* off the table for me to support individually collatable things individually, but I consider it very undesirable(...)

  111. Andrzej

    I've already tried to implement mamfc, and the biggest issue (at least with having no data in storage) is grouping of data in SQL queries as it is very hard to make them efficient and support many grouping conditions

  112. Andrzej

    adding more "collations" will only complicate things even more

  113. Kev

    larma: There's a bunch of reasons for this, and they may not apply if one is in an environment where either servers and clients are deployed in cooperative lockstep, or if servers and clients are both deployed so frequently that it doesn't matter (although the development cost of adding support to the server each time is still not to be ignored, I think - I consider changes to a server to be 'riskier' than to a client, especially when dealing with (important) persistent data) (...)

  114. Andrzej

    and in my case (maybe others as well) will force people to update data storage model

  115. dwd

    Andrzej, Yes, I certainly need to update the storage model. I believe I can manage the MAM-FC case efficiently, but I feel your pain on the effort needed on existing installations.

  116. Kev

    larma: But if one enters an environment where deployments may not be seeing much collaboration between servers and clients, or where e.g. a server has to be deployed once and only receive bugfixes for years, not having a generic solution begins to be a significant barrier to getting features in front of users.

  117. Kev

    Andrzej: Yes, dealing with the data models for all this is hard. I'm not looking forward to when we do that bit.

  118. dwd

    Kev, I do have clients and server developers in the same room - or at least, on the same video call - and even then changing isn't trivial. But a migration of (erm) 20 million message stanzas in an archive is not going to be practical, so I need to do that once only. Fastenings, with the generic summary system we designed, works OK as a join table. If we need to alter summary data per fastening, that would be hard. Adjusting collations given the same summary data s probably easier.

  119. Kev

    larma: Drawing some (possibly invalid, but I don't think so) parallels from pubsub, if we'd required server support explicitly for storing the different payload types I don't think we would have seen the sorts of unexpected adoptions it's seen (and there are numerous interesting deployments of pubsub, signalling for video conferencing systems, form submissions, etc., as well as the more obvious ones). I feel that a non-generic solution would be tying us into a dead-end. So looking at it from the point of view of trying to produce systems that allow as many people to do as many things as possible with XMPP, I come to the conclusion that a generic system is preferable (other people with the same goal might reach a different conclusion, I do not mean to imply that by reaching a different conclusion one must care less or whatever).

  120. Kev

    dwd: Are you saying that you think per-spec collation requiring server-support would be ok 9

  121. Kev

    (Editing...)

  122. Kev

    dwd: Are you saying that you think per-spec collation requiring server-support would be ok (for your deployment) as long as the per-spec collations were from a set known in advance (e.g. the mam-fc rules as-are)?

  123. Ge0rG

    Kev: https://ge0rg.gitlab.io/-/xeps/-/jobs/777236873/artifacts/rendered-changes/xep-0308.html#disco last paragraph of §2

  124. Kev

    Ge0rG: I think that ends up being an entirely non-normative-non-bumping change, and conveys the right message. Thank you.

  125. dwd

    Kev, Perhaps. :-) I think I'm saying that there are three parts to this: Collation, Summarizing, and Fastening, and they have different impacts. A server needs to know that a stanza is a fastening, and to what it applies. If this is "code knowledge", a change requires a data model migration. It needs to be able to extract the summary during the archival operation, I think, and changing that is a data model migration, so again that really needs to be generic. So far, these are things the Fastening/MAM-FC approach got comfortably right. Then we need to present the results in MAM in a useful collation - and this is where we have the most flexibility, since this is potentially just a code change.

  126. dwd

    But I'm thinking in the abstract - Andrzej, does the above make sense? You're closer to an implementation than I am.

  127. larma

    Kev, My thinking here is: There is going to be a few XEPs that are very popular and where collation makes sense and is relevant. And we'd want to support collation rules to "best" fit those usecases (because if a certain fastening is only used once in every 10k messages, collation isn't relevant at all). We can certainly guess that edits, markers, reactions are likely to be on that list, but obviously this would never be an exhaustive list and we might as well be wrong about those. I think that no matter which collation rules we come up with today, they will be unsuitable in 5-10 years. They may even hinder further development because it may cause us to make future XEPs fit the collation rules (as was suggested for reactions already) up to the level that desirable features are not possible anymore. Thinking the other direction: When a new XEP is proposed it usually takes several years for large amounts of clients picking them up and then some more time for users to make use of them. And only once a larger number of clients want to use those XEPs, it's relevant if servers support good collation for them or not, so this gives them quite a bunch of time for implementing them. And it's in the natural interest of server operators to update to a server that supports collation for a new XEP that is heavily used on that server, because collation typically means less resource usage on the server.

  128. Ge0rG

    Kev: thank *you*!

  129. Ge0rG

    jonas’: can we get https://gitlab.com/xsf/xeps/-/merge_requests/22 on today's agenda? :D

  130. Andrzej

    dwd, yes it makes sense

  131. jonas’

    Ge0rG, you can agenda-bash on-list :)

  132. jonas’

    .oO("As discussed with Kev on [email protected] MUC today")

  133. Andrzej

    actually I've stopped with implementation of mamfc as I had other things to work on and mamfc was not really a solution in my case

  134. Ge0rG

    jonas’: roger wilco

  135. Kev

    larma: What do you think the way forward should be? ISTM that even if we disagree on the nature of mam-fc specialism, we should be able to agree on a generic fastening format. (I draw some slightly different conclusions from my experiences than you from yours about the ability of server operators to upgrade etc., but I suspect that's partially orthogonal)

  136. larma

    I'd like the fastening format to be such that the fastened elements do not need to reside in the <apply-to />, i.e. I don't want to require clients to implement a specific version of fastening just to support something that servers may (if they support it) fasten to other messages and make available in MAM-FC.

  137. larma

    And I don't want fastening to define any semantics for messages that are attached to other messages, because this means restricting what can be done

  138. Kev

    > I'd like the fastening format to be such that the fastened elements do not need to reside in the <apply-to />, i.e. I don't want to require clients to implement a specific version of fastening just to support something that servers may (if they support it) fasten to other messages and make available in MAM-FC. I understand the first part, I don't understand the i.e.

  139. larma

    I meant, a version bump of fastening should not screw everything up (or require to duplicate the full message payload)

  140. Kev

    But it sounds to me like you're saying your ideal fastening spec would be to not have a fastening spec, which I can't see why it would be desirable. Even for client devs I think having a generic fastening makes life easier (altohugh not as much as for servers).

  141. dwd

    larma, I don't think the fastening syntax is as much of a problem as you seem to think - it's not been a problem for, for example, <forwarded/>, or even Carbons. And moving stuff out of Fastenings makes any form of generic support very very much harder, I think.

  142. Kev

    Ok. I agree that a version bump to fastening breaking things would be undesirable. Although I'm not sure I draw the same conclusions from that as you (that we shouldn't have a fastening format at all).

  143. larma

    dwd, I understand you'd like servers to not store the full message of a fastening but only the part that is inside the <apply-to/>? Otherwise the https://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0422.html#external-payloads would kind of solve the problem for me, if we agreed on that we don't need (using example there) the <edit> element inside the apply-to.

  144. larma

    generic support though is also still very hard if we don't have strict rules for every fastening, no matter if they are inside the <apply-to/> or not

  145. larma

    e.g. you IIRC wanted to have each <reaction /> directly inside <apply-to /> instead of the container <reactions /> element the current proposal has, this to me is a very weird restriction applied from the MAM-FC logic to totally unrelated XEPs.

  146. larma

    Beside that, just storing what is in <apply-to> is definitely not enough. We already know that for some usecases (edits) it's important to know who applied that message because only the sender may edit. So add at least the from field there. In MUCs however, it's maybe not the message's from field that's relevant, but might as well be the XEP-0421 occupant-id

  147. dwd

    larma, Not quite; I think servers still need the full stanza, but need to identify the fact it is a fastening, and the type and summary, in a generic manner. That's vastly simpler if the type and summary are derived directly from a child element. If they are inferred from other elements, that becomes a path to an attack based on differential capability I suspect.

  148. dwd

    larma, Also yes, I'd be perfectly happy if the "full fastening" was the entire stanza, in principle. It might be a bit nasty in terms of stanza size, but it's probably practical.

  149. dwd

    larma, If we went that route, we could do away with the <external/> entirely. The "shell" attribute could be done as a dummy fastening (which could be a distinct namespace, if we wanted, and include a correlator attribute, etc if desired). That would mean the <apply-to/> element was really very simple, and the namespace it sits within it somewhat better insulated from other changes, so should remain more stable.

  150. dwd

    "clear" could be moved off the element, too, into a different element with again a different, and therefore independent, namespace.

  151. dwd

    That leaves <apply-to/> itself with a single semantic, which seems more manageable. Would that allay your concerns here?

  152. larma

    I've trouble to understand how your collation of MAM-FC is supposed to work then, because of the way you generate summaries

  153. larma

    (I'd be totally happy though)

  154. larma

    Also, as a work-around, we can have external support paths

  155. larma

    <message> <apply-to xmlns="urn:xmpp:fasten:0" id="foo"> <external path="/{urn:xmpp:reactions:0}:reactions/{urn:xmpp:reactions:0}:reaction" /> </apply-to> <attach xmlns="urn:xmpp:glue:0 id="foo" /> <reactions xmlns="urn:xmpp:reactions:0"> <reaction>👋</reaction> </reactions> </message>

  156. larma

    <message> <apply-to xmlns="urn:xmpp:fasten:0" id="foo"> <external path="/{urn:xmpp:reactions:0}:reactions/{urn:xmpp:reactions:0}:reaction" /> </apply-to> <attach xmlns="urn:xmpp:glue:0 id="foo" /> <reactions xmlns="urn:xmpp:reactions:0"> <reaction emoji="👋" /> </reactions> </message>

  157. dwd

    Right, that's not ideal for me. If we use the full stanza as the "full fastening", then external just becomes redundant I think, and adds complexity for no gain.

  158. larma

    Just saying that how you currently do summaries wouldn't work then anymore, but I'm fine with that

  159. dwd

    I'm not sure I follow.

  160. larma

    well your fastening summary in mam-fc is supposed to be the element and attributes inside the apply-to. If there is nothing inside apply-to, which elements/attributes do you want to use

  161. Kev

    I'm afraid we've passed the point my addled brain can follow this for the moment.

  162. dwd

    Ah, right. Yeah, I want to keep the thing inside apply-to, and generate the summary the same generic way.

  163. larma

    Then I did not understand what you wanted to propose

  164. dwd

    So: <message> <apply-to id="foo"> <reaction emoji="hand-wavey-thing-i-don't-know-how-to-type"> <some-detail/> </reaction> </apply-to> </message>

  165. dwd

    But then that can become the sole semantic of apply-to, so "clear", "shell", and the <external/> element can all go.

  166. dwd

    (Or rather, move elsewhere).

  167. Kev

    👋🏻 - you're welcome

  168. larma

    dwd, But then again, a namespace bump to apply-to would invalidate all implementations of reactions

  169. dwd

    The idea being that then, the "urn:xmpp:fasten:0" is made much more stable. (Except obvious we'd need to bump it immediately).

  170. Kev

    larma: That is true (that a bump would invalidate things), but the same is true of other wrapping specs (e.g. pubsub), and we've managed to avoid it there.

  171. dwd

    larma, Yes, I'm trying to mitigate the need to bump that namespace. Eliminating it brings other problems.

  172. larma

    In other XEPs we have the client XEP mandate the parent XEP version (in this case it would mean that reactions XEP mandates a specific fastening version to be used)

  173. larma

    And then again, we do all this because of the model of MAM-FC you are enivisioning, not for any other reason, right?

  174. dwd

    larma, That means: 1) We have a generic way of identifying a message as a fastening, and knowing what it points to. High cost of change. 2) We have a generic way of extracting a summary. High cost of change, but also an impact on design choices for fastenings. 3) Collation strategies are left open. Medium cost of change.

  175. dwd

    larma, No, not really.

  176. Kev

    Actually, I think there's an auxiliary benefit of letting a client know what the nature of thing it doesn't understand is. Although this might not be a huge motivating factor, I think there is some value - we've had that discussion about fallbacks and about how indicating that a client didn't understand a payload, but having it know that it didn't understand it so it can let the user know would have merit.

  177. dwd

    larma, So, you'd be able to get each fastening type to both identify and summarize generically, but you could have different types which collate in MAM in broadly different ways.

  178. larma

    I don't agree with 2, because the summary is no longer generic. You are enforcing a certain model for summaries that might not be suitable for all kind of attachings

  179. dwd

    larma, Yes, we are. We also enforce lots of syntactic things. But I don't think this case is onerous - can you see any obvious counter-examples?

  180. larma

    There were discussions to support custom emojis (images) for reactions. The syntax could be something like <reaction><media-sharing /></reaction> The image would thus not be part of the summary but it's required to have it so you can display it, making the summary mostly useless.

  181. dwd

    larma, Excellent. So you'd include a hash of the image in the <reaction/> top level element, wouldn't that solve the issue?

  182. jonas’

    note: nothing forces us to bump the namespace of the <apply-to/> element unless the semantics of <apply-to/> change

  183. dwd

    larma, Or an cid URI, or whatever. It's all good. I'm not saying this won't impose design constraints, I'm saying they're not difficult to satisfy.

  184. larma

    You're implying that the media has a unique hash, but it could be multiple if multiple file formats are supported (png vs svg for example)

  185. jonas’

    meaning: if there are other elements in fastening which require a bump, we can just bump those

  186. jonas’

    without bumping <apply-to/>

  187. Kev

    jonas’: Yes, I believe that's what Dave is suggesting, but I might have mis-followed.

  188. dwd

    jonas’, Exactly, and my (loose and hastily typed) proposal is that.

  189. jonas’

    we haven’t done such things in the past, but there’s formally and technically nothing stopping us from doing so, as long as stuff is working

  190. Kev

    I think we *have* done that in the past, FWIW.

  191. jonas’

    dwd, I am only loosely follownig and catching up, so I thought I’d throw that in from the side to clarify, without actually reading what you wrote, sorry :)

  192. dwd

    jonas’, I'm actually suggesting we put the other bits into a different namespace from the outset to avoid complications later.

  193. jonas’

    dwd, even better then

  194. larma

    jonas’, yes, but the issue I see is that fastening seems to be rich in semantics even when those are not described in the XEP itself (but implied from MAM-FC)

  195. jonas’

    larma, sounds as if Fastening and MAM-FC needs to be merged then

  196. jonas’

    but I’ll step out now again

  197. larma

    yes, totally that IMO, they work hand-in-hand

  198. dwd

    larma, We definitely need to collate the semantics in one place, yes.

  199. Kev

    I felt at the time that the motivation to keep them distinct was reasonable and strong. I may have been wrong, and I can't immediately remember why we felt that.

  200. dwd

    larma, I think there's two documents there, but I don't think the split is right.

  201. larma

    The problem is that I don't agree with the implied semantics that are not even properly mentioned anywhere

  202. Kev

    It does still feel to me that how you design something like Reactions based on Fastening is distinct from how you store and query the archive in MAM-FC, but which document text resides in is probably not the biggest issue we face.

  203. larma

    Like <apply-to> <reaction emoji="👋" /> <reaction emoji="👋" /> </apply-to> Being valid and meaning that you reacted with 👋 twice which IMO shouldn't be possible at all.

  204. jonas’

    IMO, if the intent of fastening is to have a unified way to attach things to one another to be able to query stuff from archives efficiently, then the "query things from archive" part is pretty core to that and it belongs in the same document

  205. Kev

    It is not a hill I will wish to die on if I end up in a minority of 1, certainly.

  206. Kev

    All the other issues I feel are much more material than where text resides within the documents.

  207. dwd

    Likewise with cardindality 2. Or even more.

  208. dwd

    larma, Isn't that a problem with collation rather than the syntax?

  209. dwd

    larma, Or indeed the summarizing. I mean, the same issue exists in the Reactions ProtoXEP, doesn't it?

  210. larma

    The proto XEP has rules for this case

  211. dwd

    larma, Assume, for the moment, that we can collate per-XEP if needs be, so we can eliminate duplicates in the same way.

  212. dwd

    larma, I would *rather* use generic rules for collation, and as few as possible, but as I say that's vastly more practical to compromise on than the identification and summarizing itself.

  213. dwd

    Mild disgression: Back when Surevine where doing Buddycloud stuff (remember *that*?), Lloyd let a bug in which allowed people to like things multiple times if they clicked quick enough or something. "Multilike". It was a hugely popular feature^Wbug.

  214. Zash

    Super-likes!

  215. dwd

    Zash, No, just multilikes. Don't get carried away, now.

  216. Ge0rG

    M-M-M-M-M-MONSTER-LIKE!

  217. Zash

    Ge0rG: I was typing that!

  218. dwd

    I almost instinctively started to type "/giphy" then. Now there's a thing to get specced.

  219. Zash

    Specced?

  220. Ge0rG

    Where are our sticker packs? All we got are 5x sized Unicode codepoints.

  221. dwd

    Zash, "Specified", sorry.

  222. Zash

    dwd: Srsly tho, wouldn't that be all clientside?

  223. dwd

    Zash, ... maybe?

  224. dwd

    Zash, I mean, on Slack etc, it's "workspace" extensions, which corresponds very loosely with a MUC domain in my mind. So maybe that would be an interesting model to explore?

  225. Zash

    Ge0rG: https://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0038.html ?

  226. Zash

    dwd: "/giphy"?

  227. dwd

    Zash, Yeah. It's a critical business messaging tool.

  228. larma

    dwd: I'd be fine if we'd properly codify the semantics of apply-to. I remember back then that we didn't use message attach-to because its semantic didn't match. Currently MAM-FC applies certain semantics that make reactions not work as intended and thus unsuitable.

  229. larma

    dwd: I'd be fine if we'd properly codify the semantics of apply-to. I remember back then that we didn't use attach-to because its semantic didn't match. Currently MAM-FC applies certain semantics that make reactions not work as intended and thus unsuitable.

  230. dwd

    larma, Can you be a little more specific?

  231. larma

    dwd: I'd be fine if we'd properly codify the semantics of apply-to. I remember back then that we didn't use attach-to because its semantic didn't match. Currently MAM-FC implies certain semantics that make reactions not work as intended and thus unsuitable.

  232. larma

    The multi reactions example, at least

  233. larma

    I think there was more but I don't remember right now

  234. larma

    (Just writing from phone right now)

  235. Seve

    > I almost instinctively started to type "/giphy" then. I cannot lie I love that feature

  236. dwd

    larma, OK, but as I've said a few times now, I'd like to assume that we can solve multi-reactions etc in collations and not in either identification and summary.

  237. Ge0rG

    How does /giphy work? Is that a Slack feature? A pop-up where you can choose a gif?

  238. dwd

    Seve, "/giphy high five".

  239. Seve

    Haha yes

  240. Seve

    Ge0rG: Yes to all

  241. Zash

    Local (MUC? Host?) registry of Stuff that can be referenced by OOB/BOB ?

  242. Zash

    And searched

  243. dwd

    Ge0rG, Essentially, yes. Technically it's easy, the trick is that it's a service offered by Giphy (a purveyor of anumated GIFs), that you can apply to your workspace such that everyone gets the ability to send critical business information in a timely manner via animated GIFs.

  244. Ge0rG

    dwd: thanks, I'm aware of giphy, I'm interested in the integration

  245. Seve

    Couldn't have explained better dwd

  246. Ge0rG

    yaxim won't accept animated gifs from the android keyboard because I'm missing some weird flag

  247. Zash

    the android *keyboard*?

  248. jonas’

    just OOB-link to the giphy URL?

  249. dwd

    Ge0rG, In Slack terms, there is an "App" called "giphy", activated by "/giphy", which then guides the user to pick a GIF and then sends it as a message. That App is installed by anyone with the rights to do so, and Apps belong to the workspace not the individual or client.

  250. jonas’

    https://giphy.com/gifs/mHEes6Quf8XK0/html5

  251. dwd

    jonas’, The interesting bit is not the "send a GIF", but the "Provide the facility for everyone".

  252. Ge0rG

    Zash: gboard has a giphy browser built in

  253. Ge0rG

    ...where you can use the keyboard inside the keyboard to search for gifs

  254. Zash

    dwd: That relies on the client beeing integrated in the server/-ice, no?

  255. dwd

    Zash, I don't think so, in principle. The Slack client has no clue about Giphy, though it does understand generic apps.

  256. Ge0rG

    dwd: so essentially the "spec" would be: 1. choose a gif 2. (optional) make a copy on your http-upload instance 3. share an OOB 0066 link

  257. Ge0rG

    where OOB 0066 for embedding images is also undocumented and stalled in Council.

  258. dwd

    Ge0rG, No. I think the spec would be for an inline chat app you could "install" on a MUC service that your client would know how to speek to.

  259. Zash

    Ge0rG: Is it?

  260. dwd

    Ge0rG, As I say, it's more interesting than just sending the actual GIF.

  261. Ge0rG

    dwd: something something data forms adhoc?

  262. Zash

    dwd: ad-hoc command?

  263. Zash

    Ge0rG: ^

  264. larma

    dwd: I'm not saying we can't fix the semantics of fastening/mam-fc, I'm just saying that the current semantics of fastening are mostly implied from summary and collation rules in mam-fc and those semantics make it unsuitable for reactions. Which implies given the current set of XEPs, reactions can't use fastening

  265. Zash

    Ge0rG: ^5

  266. dwd

    larma, OK. I am honestly trying, in good faith, to address your concerns and find a compromise/consensus position here.

  267. dwd

    Zash, "/giphy high five". You know you want to.

  268. dwd

    Zash, Ge0rG : And yes, something ad-hoc-ish mgiht work very well as a base. Might need a few more bits on top to make it polished.

  269. larma

    The alternative would be that we just do reactions as is without fastening and then update reactions and a later time and/or in mam-fc make pseudo fastening rule for reactions once we figured how that could work.

  270. Ge0rG

    dwd: I suppose today you'd rather just open a web view that has some event channel to emit JSON to your client.

  271. larma

    The alternative would be that we just do reactions as is without fastening and then update reactions at a later time and/or in mam-fc make pseudo fastening rule for reactions once we figured how that could work.

  272. dwd

    larma, I would rather we worked to solve the problem rather than ignore it, and pseudo-fastening rules really do suck, speaking from the experience of implementing those already.

  273. dwd

    larma, That is, I would rather that we were *both* working on a consensus position.

  274. dwd

    Ge0rG, That doesn't appear to be how Slack et al operate, though the notion of web-based applets in a messaging context is interesting.

  275. Ge0rG

    Java-based Mobile Code was a huge academic hype... before the base tech got Ellisone.

  276. Ge0rG

    *d

  277. Zash

    dwd: Oh how in Riot^W Element you can just tell it to embed an arbitrary thing in an <iframe> ?

  278. Ge0rG

    can you have porn popups? Server ads from the webshit ad market?

  279. Zash

    dwd: https://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0088.html

  280. dwd

    Ge0rG, We have porn popups now, weren't you here yesterday? :-)

  281. Ge0rG

    dwd: it wasn't a popup, it was inline

  282. Zash

    This is how you do video conferencing after all, Jitsi Meet in an <iframe>

  283. Ge0rG

    dwd: I'd like to bring it on-par with the mobile surfing experience on Chrome. Redirect the whole page to "You have won! You are the 1.000.000 millionth google user!" with vibration and rewriting of the whole browser history

  284. Ge0rG

    A bot storing *that* into each matrix room's history would be... fun

  285. dwd

    Ge0rG, So you want your porn to pop up, basically. OK. More information than I needed.

  286. Zash

    Your client doesn't do popups for embedded images?

  287. Ge0rG

    Here's another case of implicit resource binding: https://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0333.html#when

  288. Kev

    Hopefully the meaning of that mail is clear, underneath all the Kev - if Council wish to still block Reactions I think at this point it should be because they agree with Kev, rather than because they are tied to Kev's decision.

  289. Kev

    I thought we were making progress earlier, but maybe not.

  290. Ge0rG

    Kev: thanks, at least I did understand the message of your message.

  291. Kev

    👍🏻

  292. Ge0rG

    Kev: is there a DOAP or a list of XEPs supported by Swift? Somebody from the other side of a certain bridge is asking why avatars don't work there.

  293. Kev

    Can we assume that before starting to be helpful, I've already done the usual 'it's the source' and suchlike helpfulnesses? I'm short of energy for my usual snark.

  294. Kev

    I think we have some sort of list, which I'm looking for now.

  295. Kev

    https://www.isode.com/products/swift-open-standards.html is probably incomplete, but is something.

  296. Kev

    It's definitely incomplete, because it doesn't have 308 on there. Hmm.

  297. Zash

    https://code.zash.se/xmpp-features/file/tip/clients/swift.lua is also likely incomplete and outdated

  298. Ge0rG

    I don't even know off the top of my head which XEP is responsible for the presence-based occupant avatars.

  299. jonas’

    it’s vcard-temp

  300. Kev

    153

  301. jonas’

    plus 153, yes

  302. Zash

    and the avatar-conversion xep

  303. Zash

    in which case it's the servers responsibility

  304. Ge0rG

    the swift-open-standards.html page claims support for 0153

  305. Kev

    Ge0rG: It is correct.

  306. Ge0rG

    will Swift only query for avatars from JIDs that had an vcard-temp❌update in their presence?

  307. Kev

    Without checking the source, I would expect that to be the case, yes.

  308. Zash

    Public shaming: Error> swift@rooms.swift.im/Zash: wait: Server-to-server connection failed: Remote server's certificate has expired

  309. Zash

    Also advertising the fancy error messages Prosody generates. Just look at them <text>s

  310. moparisthebest

    is there some official way to get something on board's agenda?

  311. MattJ

    Request it here or on the members list, or poke a board member directly

  312. moparisthebest

    thanks, I'll request here then... if you recall the whole XEP-0001 debacle last year, the resolution was someone who had an idea in their head what XEP-0001's actual goals was would clarify it via PR, and that's still not done, so can someone else be drafted to do it or?

  313. moparisthebest

    sorry for highlight debacle ...

  314. debacle has been summoned

  315. MattJ

    https://trello.com/c/6hUTQ3WE/407-xep-0001-clarifications

  316. moparisthebest

    MattJ, thanks! I even was able to find context if you want to also put it there https://logs.xmpp.org/xsf/2020-01-17#2020-01-17-d38f615a033a9159

  317. MattJ

    Very helpful, thanks

  318. MattJ

    Added

  319. Daniel

    I'd be willing to 'fix' OOB (66) to document how Conversations and some other client currently use it

  320. Daniel

    for file transfer

  321. Ge0rG

    Daniel, Zash: I really dislike that 0363 is implicitly combined with OOB and the unwritten requirement of body=oob-url

  322. Daniel

    and not for signaling random http links

  323. Daniel

    (which at least one other client is doing)

  324. Daniel

    if that fixes the situation enough for dwd

  325. dwd

    Daniel, Absolutely.

  326. Ge0rG

    Daniel: while you are at it, also add a XEP-0428 tag

  327. Daniel

    there was a thread a while ago I think were I outlined that use

  328. dwd

    And Kev, I wrote XEP-0428 in a hurry, if you've some suggestions there I'd absolutely welcome them.

  329. Ge0rG

    Somehow, I ended up explaining the "right" way to use OOB for inline images to multiple developers over the last years

  330. Daniel

    and maybe or maybe not remove the IQ protocol that literally nobody uses

  331. Daniel

    Conversations has read support

  332. Daniel

    but i don’t think it ever received one

  333. Ge0rG

    Daniel: from a semantically puristic point of view, I think that a discussion of those things would belong into 0363 and not into 0066

  334. Daniel

    i disagree

  335. jonas’

    Daniel, you should put an easteregg into C when it receives such an OOB, something with a firework gif

  336. Daniel

    because http upload is more versatile

  337. Ge0rG

    as both are in Draft, that doesn't even matter procedurally

  338. dwd

    Kev, Re-reading it, there's some odd text - like it says that a client which recognises XEP-0428's fallback tag never displays the <body/>, which seems wrong. It should, though, recognise that a body *is* a fallback and maybe mumble about it darkly.

  339. Daniel

    i mean we can (once oob is 'fixed') reference 66

  340. dwd

    Daniel, Or a new XEP that says how to do file transfer with '363 and OOB. That'd be fine too, and should be quick procedurally.

  341. jonas’

    Ge0rG, if we’re going semantically pure, it should go into an Informational ("defines best practices for implementation or deployment of an existing protocol") document separate from both

  342. Ge0rG

    Daniel: you could write a new XEP then, "Inline Document Placement"

  343. Daniel

    i think it already does; but we can reference it stronger

  344. jonas’

    dwd, ^5

  345. dwd

    jonas’, '/giphy high five'.

  346. Zash

    Ge0rG: you mean SIMS

  347. Ge0rG

    /giphy high five

  348. Ge0rG

    Zash: why isn't anybody using it?

  349. Daniel

    when I offered to 'fix' oob I meant adding a paragraph. I don’t want to write a new XEP if I can avoid it

  350. Daniel

    also i don’t think that will make it easier to discover

  351. Daniel

    for the 10s of developers Ge0rG had to explain to how to use 66

  352. Zash

    Ge0rG: Raisins and network effects? The examples make it look like bloat and it uses references.

  353. Ge0rG

    what I dislike about 0066+0363 is that to make it secure, you need to ask the user whether to expose their IP to $hosting_domain, then to do an HTTP HEAD to determine content-type and file size, then to let the user decide whether to download things

  354. jonas’

    "secure"

  355. dwd

    Daniel, Yeah, but if the new doc becomes the entry point for file sharing, it'll work. But let's start by documenting it on the mailing list and then we can decide where to put it.

  356. jonas’

    Ge0rG, that isn’t going to go away any time soon

  357. Ge0rG

    jonas’: well, SIMS will solve two of the three problems.

  358. Zash

    Ge0rG: Security considerations doesn't mention this?

  359. Ge0rG

    and if we can somehow stuff a BoB preview in it

  360. jonas’

    Ge0rG, blurhash!

  361. Kev

    dwd: I was thinking that such a client would default to not showing them, but include a marker in some manner that would allow them to be revealed.

  362. Zash

    BLURHASH!

  363. Ge0rG

    Zash: > Up- and downloading files will leak the client’s IP address to the HTTP service. The HTTP service might not be the same service as the XMPP service the client is currently connected to.

  364. Ge0rG

    jonas’: not opposed to that

  365. dwd

    Kev, UX considerations? I think the overarching principle is that the client is now in a position to make that choice, rather than what the choice is.

  366. Kev

    I also thought that the fallback would benefit from a summary of what the fallback's for.

  367. Kev

    That way a client can ask the user "When a chat contains messages we don't understand of type 'message corrections' would you like to show the fallback text?".

  368. dwd

    Kev, One of the other elements the client doesn't recognise - I wondered about this, but it wasn't clear to me what the client and/or user would do.

  369. Ge0rG

    yeah, the <fallback> element should have an attribute for the namespace that is responsible for the fallback

  370. Ge0rG

    Kev: something something i18n?

  371. Kev

    Ge0rG: I don't think the namespace is interesting to the client, because it doesn't understand it, but a textual representation is.

  372. Kev

    Ge0rG: sure, something something i18n, but you're already doing a message body as a fallback, so ...

  373. Zash

    What if you did the HTTP request via server-provided proxy?

  374. dwd

    Kev, I mean, I'm not against it, I just wondered whether the need was really there.

  375. Ge0rG

    Zash: how would you prevent your xmpp server from becoming an open http proxy?

  376. Zash

    Ge0rG: Magic

  377. dwd

    Ge0rG, Authentication for the Proxy?

  378. dwd

    Ge0rG, Bearer token, perhaps?

  379. Ge0rG

    dwd: rather pointless with IBR

  380. jonas’

    rewrite URLs in (plaintext) messages

  381. Zash

    Ge0rG: I mean, steal the way http upload works in matrix, with (server, identifier) and replication???

  382. Kev

    dwd: I'm too tired to present (or consider) a cogent argument, I think. You may be right.

  383. Ge0rG

    Kev: if we had a registry of namespaces, a client could do a live lookup ;)

  384. Kev

    Mostly I'm concerned that someone does something horrible like a fallback for a message receipt in a MUC room, or the suchlike. Or for reactions, for that matter.

  385. dwd

    Kev, I admit that part of this may have been the idea of a XEP with a single namespaces element and nothing more.

  386. dwd

    Kev, Ah, knowing whether a client is best off ignoring the message or displaying it might be useful, except that by and large if we don't want to display a message at all, then we should leave out the fallback body.

  387. Kev

    dwd: I think the (potential) issue is if someone makes a decision we disagree with.

  388. Ge0rG

    Kev: the namespace would give the user a way to opt out from the same kind of messages, regardless of the sending client's wording of what it means

  389. Kev

    Ge0rG: This is true. You could do "This message is a fallback rendering because we don't understand the format. In future would you like to [Hide] or [Show] this type of fallback?".

  390. Ge0rG

    because if your client sends type="message correction" and my client sends "editierte Nachricht", the recipient is doomed.

  391. Ge0rG

    of course you could add both, one for the machine and one for the human.

  392. Ge0rG

    and then your client would maintain a map of decisions based on the previously encountered namespaces.

  393. Kev

    That only works if you say what namespace the fallback is for though, as you say.

  394. Ge0rG

    a smart client could even remove trailing numbers from that map.

  395. Ge0rG

    Kev: the frightening thing is when the client will also store the first human-readable name it encounters in the preferences list.

  396. Ge0rG

    so you end up with an auto-populated list with mixed i18n

  397. Kev

    Ge0rG: I buy your argument that namespace is better.

  398. Kev

    At least for now.

  399. emus

    If not in your media feed already: The XMPP Newsletter for September has been published: https://xmpp.org/2020/09/newsletter-09-september/ ☕️📰️

  400. emus

    Thanks to all contributors and supporters!

  401. moparisthebest

    first, thanks for doing this, as always excellent job!

  402. moparisthebest

    second, my monthly rant, who needs annoyed to get you credentials to post it https://fosstodon.org/@xmpp/ ?

  403. moparisthebest

    otherwise stop linking it and/or let's get it deleted, looks bad that the last one posted was in June

  404. emus

    ❤️

  405. emus

    Yes you are right!

  406. moparisthebest

    do you know who might have the credentials?

  407. Seve

    Nyco :)

  408. emus

    I tried conntacting Nyco on this, but he did not reacted to it. As I would prefer to publish there as well, I think you are right to remove it actually

  409. moparisthebest

    who can contact Nyco ?

  410. emus

    I do again

  411. Seve

    I'm trying

  412. emus

    ok

  413. emus

    He said, Mastadon was an experiement, as well as reminded me that account access needs to be shared not passwords

  414. moparisthebest

    I wouldn't get hung up on that, who cares

  415. Seve

    He might be able to post there the newsletter

  416. moparisthebest

    you are the only one doing the newsletters, have him give you the password?

  417. Zash

    or create @realXMPPFoundation

  418. Ge0rG

    Seve: did you have a chance to look at the compliance page?

  419. moparisthebest

    is this another topic for board or ? who manages the official xmpp accounts?

  420. emus

    moparisthebest: I think he created that on his own

  421. moparisthebest

    then why is it on official xmpp newsletters... I assumed he created it when he was on the com team?

  422. moparisthebest

    to an outsider one of these looks more active than the other... https://mastodon.matrix.org/@matrix https://fosstodon.org/@xmpp

  423. emus

    🤷‍♂️ I think he created it with the purpose of using it for that. But no clue. I am happy to create a new mastadon account for XSF. But just not with my but official credidencials

  424. emus

    moparisthebest: guess thats true

  425. lskdjf

    The xmpp mastodon account has 700 followers after just one year. That's 40% of what the twitter account has. A relevant amount of the decentaralization / open source community is on mastodon and there's quite some potential for spreading information about XMPP there. I think calling it an "experiment" is a bad reason for neglecting that opportunity, especially given that there are people who would be happy to actually like to make good use of it.

  426. Zash

    Do you have access to the Twitter account?

  427. Seve

    I think you guys are not being fair with Nyco

  428. Zash

    "you", emus / commteam / someone?

  429. Seve

    He created the account when we were starting with the newsletter amd so on

  430. Zash

    (I was not replying to Seve there)

  431. emus

    lskdjf, agreed, but its not that I dont want or so

  432. emus

    what Seve says ^

  433. Seve

    He created the account when we were starting with the newsletter and so on

  434. Seve

    He might be busy these days and might need help to take care of it. I've got in touch with him to see what can we do

  435. moparisthebest

    Seve, what does that have to do with anything?

  436. Seve

    Now that it has proven valuable

  437. moparisthebest

    it sounded like emus got ahold of him and Nyco said he wouldn't give emus access?

  438. emus

    I suggest to Seve and jcbrand and Nyco (?) that we arrange a meeting and discuss how to proceed

  439. emus

    They would give me only access to an account I already own there. But I dont have and I dont want my own account (at least at the moment)

  440. Seve

    I'll get back with news at the commteam emus 👍

  441. emus

    ok

  442. emus

    Anyway moparist thanks for bringing that up again

  443. moparisthebest

    I hate to be "that guy" but this is month 4 so how soon might something be done

  444. moparisthebest

    now that I'm looking the linked XSF accounts are kinda all over the place: twitter: last newsletter post sept, so mostly up to date linkedin: last newsletter post june facebook: last post ever sept 2019 fosstodon: last newsletter post june reddit: no newsletter posts? not sure how this is supposed to work

  445. Seve

    moparisthebest: thanks for pointing that out, it would be nice if we can at least publish the newsletter on each of them. Writing that down.

  446. moparisthebest

    +1

  447. lskdjf

    a while back, it has been suggested to use a twitter-to-mastodon mirror. Surely such mirror-tools exist also for the other platforms? Such that every post on twitter is also automatically posted to linkedin, facebook, mastodon, etc

  448. moparisthebest

    (matrix's twitter says it's bridged to it's mastodon so at least that exists)

  449. dwd

    I wonder if any of the companies using XMPP have a social media marketing type they could lend some time for? I can certainly ask at Pando if that would be acceptable to the XSF?

  450. guus.der.kinderen

    I think that that'd be good.

  451. guus.der.kinderen

    we've previously discussed the option to hire someone, which met with some resistance. An in-kind donation would be preferable, I think.

  452. emus

    I think we should just keep/have an XSF account directly accessible from XSF setups, and nothing through others. Haveing accounts with rights to tweet connected okay, but there should be always offical credidencials registered. And I also against letting any company being the main contact of our media accounts. All of that and as it already is sounds crazy to me

  453. moparisthebest

    yea seems like active comms team members being able to actually use the accounts seems like a required first step to anything

  454. Shell

    lskdjf: generally there's things like Hootsuite/Zoho Social/etc for this, although they have a monthly fee.

  455. moparisthebest

    I mean, with the hopefully-one-post-per-month frequency we are talking is that even needed?

  456. dwd

    emus, I'm not suggesting the social media is run by a company. I'm suggesting one (or more) of the companies might have social media people who could work for the XSF, either as volunteers or sponsored by their employer. Basically that's the same principle as many of the other people doing XSF stuff.

  457. moparisthebest

    wouldn't that require someone (the board???) to define what they want that social media presence to look like?

  458. guus.der.kinderen

    I think that's more in commsteam area

  459. guus.der.kinderen

    iirc, board expressed willingness to facilitate comms with how they'd prefer to work: with a hired marketing consultant, or with an in-kind donation of such a person along the lines of what dwd suggested (or, although not discussed, any other suggestion that they might have)

  460. emus

    dwd, guus.der.kinderen: I think thats a thing we should be able clear out and organise ourselves. It is not a problem to drop the tweets for mw, its just a matter of access (I dont have, because I dont run an account myself). So, lets wait what Seve comes back with for the moment

  461. guus.der.kinderen

    Commteam members having access to ... comms ... seems like an obvious basic requirement.

  462. emus

    guus.der.kinderen: jc and nyco have. but nyco seems out and Jc has no time

  463. jcbrand

    There's a simple solution to giving emus Twitter access. He just needs to create an account

  464. dwd

    emus, I'm just saying that "ourselves" could usefully include some actual marketing expertise, and companies that already work in/around XMPP might be a place to recruit, and said companies might even let them do it on company time.

  465. jcbrand

    Last I heard, he doesn't want to. There is no other to give him access AFAIK

  466. jcbrand

    Last I heard, he doesn't want to. There is no other way to give him access AFAIK

  467. dwd

    emus, I really don't understand why we'd want to deliberately avoid having professional help here.

  468. Seve will this week create a Twitter account to be able to tweet too

  469. guus.der.kinderen

    Well, whatever commteams thinks is a good idea. I'm not part of that team for a good reason: I suck at comms, and it does not have my interest much either :)

  470. guus.der.kinderen

    Board has already expressed that if commteam has thoughts on how to improve things, there's willingness to look at how that can be facilitated (budget or otherwise)

  471. Zash

    There's some delicious irony in building communications tools and not being great at communication. (Speaking of myself here.)

  472. guus.der.kinderen

    having another commteam member that, in his/her daytime job works in communications or marketing or somesuch seems like a valuable addition.

  473. Zash

    Tho, helping others communicate is nice.

  474. lskdjf

    emus, I think there might be a misunderstanding between you and dwd. You seem to think that dwd suggested that the professionals take over most of the communication work. You apparently assumed the professional would be the only one with social media access and would be the main contact, but dwd never said so. He only spoke of having them "help". As far as I understand, that help might also consist of giving tips from their experience.

  475. dwd

    lskdjf, Oh, no, I was planning this whole evil cororate takeover thing. Sorry if you misunderstood.

  476. Zash

    dwd: I'm afraid you forgot to put the new cover sheet on your evil corporate takeover progress report.

  477. moparisthebest

    and not even a TPS report

  478. dwd

    And remember, next Friday is Hawaiian shirt day.

  479. Zash

    and Happy New Fiscal Year to all you enterprises out there!

  480. guus.der.kinderen

    I'm going to steal a printer and beat the crap out of it in a field. Anyone care to join.

  481. dwd

    wellyouseethatwasmystapler.

  482. wurstsalat smells burned office supplies

  483. Zash

    I love the smell of burnt plastic in the evening

  484. emus

    dwd: Yeah, agreed to take professional help. Just the critics on the account access. No, there was a misunderstanding that I refuse help I think guus.der.kinderen: Yeah that would be great. > Last I heard, he doesn't want to. There is no other way to give him access AFAIK Yes, that is the case. Furthermore, I would need to do that for mastadon, linkedin, reddit etc. as well 😬 I also think, as of not putting everything on my workload, that this is a good task someone else with at least one of those accounts can take over. And it just feels weird to me to create an account to work with another account 🤷‍♂️ Sorry for that guys.