Translations:Nomadic identity/5/en: Difference between revisions
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Macgirvin decided that the only way to secure people's online identity was for it to exist on multiple independent servers. Thus, the idea of nomadic identity was born. However, this was impossible to implement on Friendika with its {{Internal link |target=DFRN |link-name=DFRN}} protocol. So Macgirvin started designing a whole new protocol named {{Internal link |target=Zot and Nomad |link-name=Zot}}. In 2012, he handed the development of what was now known as Friendica over to the community and forked it into what would become {{Internal link |target= | Macgirvin decided that the only way to secure people's online identity was for it to exist on multiple independent servers. Thus, the idea of nomadic identity was born. However, this was impossible to implement on Friendika with its {{Internal link |target=DFRN |link-name=DFRN}} protocol. So Macgirvin started designing a whole new protocol named {{Internal link |target=Zot and Nomad |link-name=Zot}}. In 2012, he handed the development of what was now known as Friendica over to the community and forked it into what would become {{Internal link |target=Redmatrix (discontinued) |link-name=the Red Matrix}} and, in 2015, evolve into Hubzilla. |
Latest revision as of 21:27, 13 November 2024
Macgirvin decided that the only way to secure people's online identity was for it to exist on multiple independent servers. Thus, the idea of nomadic identity was born. However, this was impossible to implement on Friendika with its DFRN protocol. So Macgirvin started designing a whole new protocol named Zot. In 2012, he handed the development of what was now known as Friendica over to the community and forked it into what would become the Red Matrix and, in 2015, evolve into Hubzilla.