Having a deal with one platform doesn't automatically mean you can't post on another. If Twitter/Reddit are afraid enough of Bluesky that they are writing exclusivity into their contracts, I think that's something to see.
I'd love to know why they needed a custom contract in the first place. My company doesn't have a "deal" with Twitter but we still post there.
> I'd love to know why they needed a custom contract in the first place. My company doesn't have a "deal" with Twitter but we still post there.
I suspect it has to do with the permission to share highlights from the match in their official accounts. Probably those videos belong to the broadcasters and not to the teams themselves. One of the links from the article [1] says that the agreement provides X users with highlights such as touchdowns.
This does not mean that not being able to create an account on a different network is a dumb restriction, even if it's for sharing news or pictures of the team on special days and not videos from the games.
> Under this multiyear deal extension, the NFL and X will bring even more custom content for brands to sponsor in the form of co-branded highlights, sponsored Spaces, polls, and other creative formats. Let’s go!
> What control do they need beyond normal copyright?
Money. Content partners pay to have NFL content on their platforms, NFL content is highly valuable, so the NFL doesn't want anyone else to monetize it without the NFL getting their cut.
Yes! They don't have a Bluesky monetization strategy yet or they have one and it says Bluesky isn't profitable for them or they have one and it forecasts profitability but some counter-party has not given the NFL their preferred terms.
The Trending page is ALWAYS full of sport hashtags. Always...like over 75% of the trending topics are sports. No matter how many times i click "Not Interested" it still shows me sports. Its like ESPN is paying a huge amount of money to completely monopolize the trends list
Also bsky doesn't suppress links to other sites the way X, TiKTok, Facebook and many other networks do. That's a more basic "federation" practice because it lets you
In my mind POSSE is about loose instead of close integration.
If I understand what's going on with WhiteWind it's taking advantage of another dimension of federation which the "fediverse" doesn't address, which is identity. It seems it's a blog service that is linked to my ATProto account that anyone can use so long as they have one.
I'll make the case that the fediverse style of federation has a low level of trust for this sort of things. If I log on to a service that uses Facebook or Bluesky or whatever for identity, there's always the risk that the people who run the service can let somebody else log in. I've got some trust in mastodon.social but plenty of small server administrators in the fediverse have demonstrated that they can't be trusted.
I was thinking more that they have a custom lexicon, so you could create and view WhiteWind records without using their app at all. That your content lives on the ATProto network, and more specifically in your own database which you can migrate and/or run yourself. This would seem to align with your loose coupling line of thinking
My understanding is that your content gets stored in your database, regardless of PDS host. Bluesky hosts most PDS
I believe each user gets a dedicated sqlite database, or at least a dedicated repo. I recall reading somewhere about the implementation moving to use sqlite
Nothing to see here. Per TFA, the league has content deals with twitter, meta, & reddit, but not with Bluesky.
Having a deal with one platform doesn't automatically mean you can't post on another. If Twitter/Reddit are afraid enough of Bluesky that they are writing exclusivity into their contracts, I think that's something to see.
I'd love to know why they needed a custom contract in the first place. My company doesn't have a "deal" with Twitter but we still post there.
> I'd love to know why they needed a custom contract in the first place. My company doesn't have a "deal" with Twitter but we still post there.
I suspect it has to do with the permission to share highlights from the match in their official accounts. Probably those videos belong to the broadcasters and not to the teams themselves. One of the links from the article [1] says that the agreement provides X users with highlights such as touchdowns.
This does not mean that not being able to create an account on a different network is a dumb restriction, even if it's for sharing news or pictures of the team on special days and not videos from the games.
[1] https://deadline.com/2024/04/nfl-x-twitter-renew-content-par...
> Under this multiyear deal extension, the NFL and X will bring even more custom content for brands to sponsor in the form of co-branded highlights, sponsored Spaces, polls, and other creative formats. Let’s go!
https://deadline.com/2024/04/nfl-x-twitter-renew-content-par...
Your company is not the NFL. The NFL is a content-based company that tightly controls its content distribution channels.
No one is afraid here, they are just businessmen doing business.
> tightly controls its content distribution channels
Buy why? What control do they need beyond normal copyright? And what does the NFL gain from not being able to reach tens of millions of Bluesky users?
> What control do they need beyond normal copyright?
Money. Content partners pay to have NFL content on their platforms, NFL content is highly valuable, so the NFL doesn't want anyone else to monetize it without the NFL getting their cut.
Yes! They don't have a Bluesky monetization strategy yet or they have one and it says Bluesky isn't profitable for them or they have one and it forecasts profitability but some counter-party has not given the NFL their preferred terms.
That is a lot of words to just say: money.
The Trending page is ALWAYS full of sport hashtags. Always...like over 75% of the trending topics are sports. No matter how many times i click "Not Interested" it still shows me sports. Its like ESPN is paying a huge amount of money to completely monopolize the trends list
Twitter is the new VE301. [^0]
[^0]: https://exhibitions.ushmm.org/propaganda/german-radio-the-pe...
Nice, yet another reason to go to Bluesky :)
But my guess is Twitter and sites like that pay for the NFL to be on their site. Since Bluesky is decentralized, no place or one to extort $ from.
Is it really decentralised? What server can I sign up to? Apart from bsky.app or am I overlooking something?
https://github.com/bluesky-social/pds You can run your own server if you like
There are also 3rd party algorithms, moderation, and interfaces you can mix and match
Also bsky doesn't suppress links to other sites the way X, TiKTok, Facebook and many other networks do. That's a more basic "federation" practice because it lets you
https://www.theverge.com/2023/10/23/23928550/posse-posting-a...
There are also a number of projects that bring comments on ATProto back to the original content
Do you think WhiteWind fits into the POSSE model because your content lives in your ATProto database?
In my mind POSSE is about loose instead of close integration.
If I understand what's going on with WhiteWind it's taking advantage of another dimension of federation which the "fediverse" doesn't address, which is identity. It seems it's a blog service that is linked to my ATProto account that anyone can use so long as they have one.
I'll make the case that the fediverse style of federation has a low level of trust for this sort of things. If I log on to a service that uses Facebook or Bluesky or whatever for identity, there's always the risk that the people who run the service can let somebody else log in. I've got some trust in mastodon.social but plenty of small server administrators in the fediverse have demonstrated that they can't be trusted.
I was thinking more that they have a custom lexicon, so you could create and view WhiteWind records without using their app at all. That your content lives on the ATProto network, and more specifically in your own database which you can migrate and/or run yourself. This would seem to align with your loose coupling line of thinking
https://github.com/whtwnd/whitewind-blog/tree/main/lexicons/...
So if I am a bsky.social user the content gets stored in their database, and if I have a PDS the content gets stored in my PDS?
Yep. If you look at the repo browser for @bnewbold.net, you can see his blogposts: https://atproto-browser.vercel.app/at/did:plc:44ybard66vv44z...
My understanding is that your content gets stored in your database, regardless of PDS host. Bluesky hosts most PDS
I believe each user gets a dedicated sqlite database, or at least a dedicated repo. I recall reading somewhere about the implementation moving to use sqlite
"My" instance of sqlite that they host?
yeah, that is my understanding, if I understand your question correctly.
Of course it is all hidden from view, there is a merkle tree involved, and you probably want to use a higher level client than SQL
This talks about why SQLite and not Postgres
https://github.com/bluesky-social/atproto/discussions/2287
Repository spec:
https://atproto.com/specs/repository
Small program to export:
https://github.com/bluesky-social/cookbook/tree/main/go-repo...
Some more interesting breadcrumbs (what does it take to implement a repo)
https://github.com/bluesky-social/atproto/discussions/2644
Cool, didn't know that.. PDS sounds interesting.
There is a community ATProto discord to get help if you need it
https://discord.gg/VweB8gn5
yup, it seems like it is more mature than last time I looked. Going to be spinning up my own when I get a chance