I think this is a good incentive for Journalists to be more active on the fediverse.
It’s certainly better than all those verification scams that were popping up after a lot of journos migrated off Twitter…
Speaking of bylines, at this time of writing the only comment on the Verge piece claims that “‘Fediverse’ is the dumbest possible name [and] we gotta come up with a different one”. Signed, “DarthLazers” 🤣
It works in a pretty neat way:
We’ve decided to create a new kind of OpenGraph tag—the same kind of tags you have on your website to determine which thumbnail image will appear on the preview for the page when shared on Discord, iMessage, or Mastodon. It looks like this: <meta name=“fediverse:creator” content=“@Gargron@mastodon.social” />.
via: https://blog.joinmastodon.org/2024/07/highlighting-journalism-on-mastodon/
This is the best summary I could come up with:
If you’re on Mastodon, you might notice new author bylines appearing alongside articles — including those from The Verge.
Click on the byline, and you’ll jump directly to the author’s fediverse account, allowing you to track their work wherever it’s posted.
You can see how author bylines appear beneath articles in this post, which links you to Mastodon CEO Eugen Rochko’s profile.
It can also lead to a person’s profile on Threads, Flipboard, WordPress with ActivityPub, PeerTube, and others.
Mastodon is working to open up the feature to more outlets, too, but it currently requires “manual review” to prevent “malicious sites framing users as their authors.” However, Mastodon plans on launching “a self-serve system” to manage the sites authors can appear from in the future.
Even though it’s not widely rolled out just yet, it does seem like a neat way to quickly find out who wrote an article and check out their other work across multiple platforms.
The original article contains 242 words, the summary contains 158 words. Saved 35%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!