Social Web

The Social Web and Digital Sovereignty: Building Social Advocacy Networks in and for Europe.

H.2215 (Ferrer)
Sandra Barthel
<p>In this talk, I will discuss the collaborative efforts that began in 2025 with the aim of establishing an advocacy network for the social web. While the developer community is flourishing with the support of the Social Web Foundation and others, few communicators have raised their voices and made demands addressed to the political sphere, such as the European Union. </p> <p>As social web engaged people with professional backgrounds in policy work and communication have become involved in social networks in Europe, interest and efforts to strengthen communication and political demands in the European digital policy landscape have grown. </p> <p>In order to be approachable by interested lawmakers and public organizations, we need advocacy networks. What goals and benefits could be achieved through such networks? They would enable regulatory influence and support, secure public funding, and help advocates to sit on public and non-public panels. This would enable them to raise awareness and advocate for decentralised social networks as a means of achieving digital sovereignty. </p> <p>One of our important political messages is to emphasize the importance of social networks as a fundamental building block in the pursuit of digital sovereignty in and for Europe. Social networks should also be recognized as a service that must be included in discussions about Eurostacks. </p> <p>To get those and other messages heard and repeated, we need more people to join these efforts. In my talk, I will discuss the current state of stewardship of the open social web, and the political goals we should aim to achieve in 2026.</p>

Additional information

Live Stream https://live.fosdem.org/watch/h2215
Type devroom
Language English

More sessions

1/31/26
Social Web
Matthias Pfefferle
H.2215 (Ferrer)
<p>WordPress joined the fediverse more than 15 years ago and is still the underdog, but the potential is huge, after all, nearly 40% of the internet is powered by WordPress.</p> <p>WordPress doesn’t come from the same place as social platforms. Unlike platforms built purely for social interaction, WordPress is driven by a very different set of needs, priorities and expectations. I want to give a few insights into how running your own ActivityPub instance can feel as easy as installing a plugin ...
1/31/26
Social Web
Hannah Aubry
H.2215 (Ferrer)
<p>The social web is bigger than software. It’s a movement to build a liberated internet for the people, and it will take all of us working together to deliver on that promise. </p> <p>Mastodon is a decentralised social networking platform powered by free software which allows users and institutions to create and join independent communities. It's also the nonprofit foundation that supports them, and looking after the humans of the social web is core to the Mastodon foundation’s mission. If ...
1/31/26
Social Web
Benjamin Bellamy
H.2215 (Ferrer)
<p>The web is facing a critical moment. In an era of geopolitical fragmentation and relentless platform <em><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enshittification">enshittification</a></em>, we cannot afford to remain dependent on Big Tech gatekeepers for our digital voices. The Social Web offers an alternative—but only if we actively claim it.</p> <p>We'll show you how to establish genuine digital sovereignty by federating different content types across the Fediverse. Through live demos of ...
1/31/26
Social Web
Björn Staschen
H.2215 (Ferrer)
<p>The German-European initiative Save Social proposes a 25 minutes session focused on broadening the involvement of society in the development and stewardship of the open social web. Despite immense progress in establishing open alternatives like Mastodon or Friendica, today's open social web has struggled to connect with and empower the wider public, often because structural support has concentrated on technical advancements rather than inclusive engagement and content diversity. A handful of ...
1/31/26
Social Web
Evan Prodromou
H.2215 (Ferrer)
<p>Many ActivityPub servers have a feature to follow a hashtag locally -- subscribing to receive all the content with a particular hashtag that your server knows about, as it arrives. Could we provide a similar feature across the Fediverse? tags.pub is a project to implement that feature -- collecting tagged content and redistributing it by hashtag. In this talk, Evan will discuss the motivations behind tags.pub, its implementation, and outline future steps for global hashtag services.</p>
1/31/26
Social Web
Paul Fuxjäger
H.2215 (Ferrer)
<p>We will demo two small prototypes that are aimed at showcasing that a combination of domain-based identities and self-sovereign identities may be useful to help increase long-term stability of relations within the fediverse - in case DNS-based redirect/move methods fail.</p> <p>The core idea is to work towards something we like to refer to as ‘cross-network coherence’ of open social web identity: representations that are comprised of elements from both DNS and DID:PLC which are ...
1/31/26
Social Web
Django Doucet
H.2215 (Ferrer)
<p>Since Mastodon, a prominent adopter of ActivityPub, developed its own client API, it has been embraced by various projects, even reaching beyond microblogging platforms. Despite its potential, the ActivityPub Client-to-Server API has received minimal attention, leading many platform developers to overlook it in favour of building bespoke or third-party solutions. </p> <p>My talk will explore the unfulfilled promise of a general-purpose client built on ActivityPub's Client API. By developing a ...