I did now, and I do agree that registrars could play some role in a more decentralized future, though I’m still unconvinced ActivityPub will end up being the protocol primarily used in that future.
Right, one can never be certain about the future, but AP is showing some staying power and (I think) the main reason that it’s not evolving faster is because we are not exploring possibilities beyond “let’s clone popular closed networks, and slap some AP to pass data around homogeneous servers”.
Domain registrars do indeed make money off of this.
Did you read the next post on my series, by any chance? ;)
I did now, and I do agree that registrars could play some role in a more decentralized future, though I’m still unconvinced ActivityPub will end up being the protocol primarily used in that future.
BTW, you might be aware of this, but there is already a DNS-based authentication protocol (DANE, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNS-based_Authentication_of_Named_Entities) which is supported by various mail servers.
Right, one can never be certain about the future, but AP is showing some staying power and (I think) the main reason that it’s not evolving faster is because we are not exploring possibilities beyond “let’s clone popular closed networks, and slap some AP to pass data around homogeneous servers”.