this post was submitted on 12 Oct 2024
32 points (100.0% liked)

Rust

5953 readers
10 users here now

Welcome to the Rust community! This is a place to discuss about the Rust programming language.

Wormhole

!performance@programming.dev

Credits

  • The icon is a modified version of the official rust logo (changing the colors to a gradient and black background)

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 

Links:

For a lot of us, atproto projects are some of the biggest (most users, most publicized, most code written, etc.) projects we’ve ever done. For me, it’s also my first time working in open source (ironically, someone asked me to be more open about that)

If you can help, pls check out open issues.

I know not everyone thinks highly of atproto around these parts, but please don’t let that get in the way of welcoming a fellow rustacean into the open source world 🦀

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] BB_C@programming.dev 2 points 3 weeks ago

Yeah. I read the linked explanation by OP.

User repositories is basically how FMS on Freenet (now Hyphanet) works. The big difference is that JSON is used at AT instead of XML 😁. Also, things on Freenet are "content addressable" (what a buzz word) and immutable, always has been.

General data scalability is a part of the Freenet network model. App bandwidth and sync is admittedly not optimal, since on FMS, you basically pull from everyone's feed to your database (bar the ones you distrust, or others you trust their distrust judgment distrust). But that can be trivially fixed by adding watchers split over the keyspace. These watchers can give users metadata about who to pull/update from. This of course was never actually needed since the user-base is small.

So reading about AT, I was left wondering. Is this really innovative? Then I read this part

Our founding engineers were core IPFS and Dat engineers

.. and everything made sense. The masters of pretending they are coming up with new stuff are at it again.