Today's Deep-Dive: Known
Ep. 365

Today's Deep-Dive: Known

Episode description

Who really owns the content you post online? In this episode, we dive into Known, an open-source social publishing platform built around a simple but radical idea: you should be able to publish photos, notes, stories, and updates with the ease of social media—without giving up control of your data, your domain, or your digital identity.

Known bridges the gap between the convenience of mainstream social platforms and the sovereignty of self-hosting. It offers a responsive, mobile-friendly publishing experience, supports multiple content types, and makes sharing easy with tools like bookmarklets, hashtags, rich text editing, and custom HTML. The result is a platform that feels modern and accessible while still giving users full ownership of their site and content.

A major part of that ownership comes through custom domains, privacy controls, and multi-author support. Whether you want a private journal, a collaborative publication, or a public personal website, Known gives you the flexibility to decide how your content is shared and who can participate. It also supports multiple feed formats like RSS, JSON, XML, and KML, making your content portable and machine-readable rather than locked inside a proprietary app.

We also explore Known’s connection to the IndieWeb movement, a broader effort to create a web where independently owned sites can interact directly with one another—much like email works today. Instead of depending on a central platform to mediate social interaction, Known helps turn your own website into the center of your online presence.

If you’ve ever wondered whether social media convenience must always come at the cost of ownership, this deep dive into Known shows that there is another path: an open, decentralized social web where your content truly belongs to you.

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Download transcript (.srt)
0:00

Welcome back to the deep dive where we take the complicated and well try and make

0:04

it concise

0:05

Insightful and honestly a lot of fun. I think we succeed most of the time. I hope

0:09

so

0:10

Today we're strapping in for a deep dive that really addresses a question

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I think we all grapple with who actually owns the stuff you create and post online,

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right?

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It's a huge question and we're gonna be moving beyond those, you know, the

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traditional social media silos

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We're exploring a platform that's designed specifically to put true content

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ownership back in your hands

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That's it. Exactly. Our mission today is to give you a really beginner-friendly

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Accessible entry point into understanding decentralized publishing and we're doing

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that by looking at a specific tool, right?

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We are it's an open source tool called known and it's more than just software

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really

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It's a social publishing platform that actively tries to deliver on that old

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promise of the open web the one we all hope for

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yeah flexible user controlled and

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Completely sovereign. We want to make sure you walk away with a crystal-clear idea

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of not just what it is

1:03

But why it matters and before we dive into the you know, the fundamental

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architecture of this open web challenger

1:09

We do want to acknowledge the support that makes this deep dive possible

1:14

Absolutely, this whole exploration of digital sovereignty and content ownership is

1:19

supported by safe server

1:20

They focus on hosting and supporting your digital transformation, which is I mean a

1:25

perfect fit for today's topic

1:27

It really is they make sure you have the robust infrastructure you need to truly

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own your space online

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They're a dedicated host for software just like known

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So if you're looking to take control of your digital future, you can find out more

1:40

at

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www.safeserver.de

1:42

great

1:44

Fantastic. Okay, let's untack this our sources today are

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drawn straight from the platform's official documentation and feature lists right

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from the horse's mouth exactly the true DNA of the project

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Which gives us a clear picture of what known is designed to do and how it actually

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works for an everyday person

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Okay, let's start at the top the philosophy right the documentation calls known and

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open publishing platform and a social

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Publishing platform and then it makes this bold almost revolutionary statement. It

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says this is really how the web should be

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It's a huge claim and it immediately sets up a conflict doesn't it does because we

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associate social with you know

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Facebook or Instagram where the company owns the feed the algorithm everything it

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absolutely does and the core identity here is

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Bridging that gap between convenience and sovereignty. We're always told we have to

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choose

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You can have the easy sharing of a walled garden like X or you can have the

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technical headache of self-hosting

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Exactly and known basically says no you can have the ease of use and control your

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data

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The platform is designed to do all those everyday social things sharing photos

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notes updates stuff

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We do now all of it, but because you own the installation you own the

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infrastructure

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So the source is really really lean into the simplicity angle. It's built for

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simple publishing

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It lets users create and share photos notes stories songs and more

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For someone who might be a little wary of self-hosting how does known make sure

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that interface is truly friendly and not I don't know

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Not like you're managing a database and that's a crucial distinction. It's a real

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fear people have known tackles that perceived

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Complexity with accessibility just baked right into the design. Okay, the interface

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is fully responsive

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Which means it works fluidly on any device. The goal is to make managing your

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content feel, you know

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Instantaneous regardless of where you are that accessibility is crucial, but let's

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be realistic

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I mean responsive design is pretty standard now true

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What specifically makes knowns mobile experience feel less constrained than say

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trying to manage a full-scale WordPress blog from your phone?

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Yeah, which can be a nightmare. It can be the key is what you could call context-aware

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publishing is designed around

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Microformats these small specific content types. So like if I post a photo it knows

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I'm posting a photo

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Exactly, when you post a photo it knows you want photo metadata when you post a

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note

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It knows you just need a simple text field

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this is why you can view edit and post whether you are sharing a sunset picture

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from the beach or

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Blogging from the road. I see the system is built to eliminate those location or

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device constraints that you get with traditional web publishing

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It gives you the same flexibility as a dedicated mobile app, but without handing

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over the keys to your data

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That's the punchline. That makes perfect sense. The simplicity is about reducing

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the

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The cognitive load on the user

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Yeah

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The platform helps you more easily organize all your digital info in one place

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because everything is structured from the moment you hit publish

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Precisely the key insight for you. The learner is that knowns design philosophy

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Let's you regain ownership without sacrificing that immediacy and accessibility you've

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come to expect from social media

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Okay, here's where it gets really interesting for me

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Let's dive into the essential features because this is where known directly

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challenges the functionality

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We rely on every day in those big social silos, right?

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What are the tools that actually make it usable exactly what makes it simple and

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fast enough to genuinely compete with a dedicated app?

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Okay, let's start with reducing friction. They offer a simple but really powerful

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tool called the bookmark lit a bookmark lit

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Okay, it's a small browser tool. Basically a piece of JavaScript

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You just drag to your bookmarks bar that lets you easily post links save content

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and even respond to comments from any page on the web

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Oh, wow

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So you don't have to navigate back to your known site to share something you just

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found not at all

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It removes that step completely that immediately addresses the ease of use factor

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for curating content and for organization

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I see you can use hashtag tags just like we're used to yep

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hashtags with any content to categorize and organize what you publish and

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That organization ties directly back into control how so well for content creation

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itself

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Known acknowledges that users have different needs you have a choice

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You can handcraft your posts in HTML if you want absolute pixel perfect control for

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the power users for the power users

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Or you can opt for maximum convenience with the wise. I we G editor the

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What you see is what you get rich text editor. So it's that duality again

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It's a microcosm of knowns philosophy. Mm-hmm control when you wanted simplicity

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when you need it and this flexibility

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Extends pretty significantly into ownership, which again is the whole point of this

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deep dive

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Let's talk about the features that define that sovereignty the custom URL

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That has to be the foundation, right? Absolutely when you're on a centralized

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service

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You're essentially just renting space right if that service disappears or if it

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changes its terms your content is at risk

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Known explicitly gives you the power to bring your own URL and really own your site

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with a custom domain

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So you are the landlord not the tenant. That's the perfect analogy

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It's the single greatest assurance against archival risk and you know changing

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terms of service and beyond just the domain control also means control

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Over who sees what you post correct privacy is paramount and known builds that

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granularity right into the system

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You have the ability to keep your entire site private

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Which would be perfect for what personal thoughts or a private group discussion as

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the docs say?

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Exactly, you can use it as a digital diary that no one else sees or as a secure

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communication hub for a small team

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And what if you were building something bigger like a community project or a

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collaborative blog?

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Then the multi-author feature scales your sovereignty

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You can invite an unlimited number of collaborators to a multi-user site, but you

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still own the root

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URL you still own it, but you allow others to contribute seamlessly

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This shows known is built not just for the individual but for these small self-governing

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communities

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Okay. Finally, let's talk about the feedback loop. We are so used to instant

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notifications on apps

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How does known make sure you don't miss out on interaction when your content is

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decentralized?

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It ensures robust connectivity through comprehensive feed formats. Your content is

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accessible via RSS XML

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JSON or KML. Okay. Those are a lot of acronyms. They are

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But they're just different ways machines and services can consume your data

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RSS and XML are great for traditional readers, but JSON is super fast and efficient

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for machine-to-machine updates

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But wait a second. Why would a social publishing platform need KML specifically?

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That's usually for geographical data for maps. That is a fascinating detail in the

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source documentation, isn't it?

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It is. Yeah. What does that tell us about their broader ambition? Well, KML stands

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for keyhole markup language

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And it's used for encoding location data for programs like Google Earth. Its

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inclusion suggests that known is

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Anticipating and supporting location-based posts. Like that sunset picture from the

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beach. Exactly.

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And ensuring that location data is also owned, organized, and available for

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consumption by specialized mapping services

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Rather than being locked into some proprietary systems location tag.

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It just expands the definition of what content actually means. You really don't.

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That attention to detail is pretty insightful plus

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I see they still support email notifications, so you get updated when someone

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responds. You still get that familiar

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immediate feedback loop. So at the end of the day you have the flexibility of an

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app, the

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customization of a blog, and the ownership of your own server. Let's transition now

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to the foundational element that makes known truly unique.

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What's fascinating here is its connection to the decentralized IndieWeb movement.

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Now for a beginner, that term sounds like a massive technical hurdle, but at its

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heart, it's really just a protocol for

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polite digital conversation, isn't it? That's a great way to put it. It is a

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philosophical leap that requires technical support,

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but we can simplify the core idea. Please do. If we connect this to the bigger

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picture,

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the IndieWeb is about breaking down the silos.

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Think of it like email.

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You can send a message from Gmail and I can read it on Outlook or a private server.

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And it just works.

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The communication is federated. Exactly.

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It doesn't need a single intermediary to function. And the current social web is

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the total opposite of that. If I post a photo on Instagram,

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it lives and dies on Instagram. Exactly. Your platform acts as a gatekeeper.

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The IndieWeb philosophy, which NONE is built on, is that sites running these

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compatible platforms can respond to each other,

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bookmark each other's content, and leave comments on each other's posts directly.

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So instead of logging into five different corporate platforms to interact, my

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personal site becomes the hub.

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Your personal site is the hub, communicating directly with other people's personal

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sites.

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It is true peer-to-peer social interaction. It sounds like taking the best parts of

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early

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conversational blogging and injecting modern social connectivity, all while cutting

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out the corporate middleman.

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That's the perfect summary. It decentralizes the social graph, making sure that the

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relationships between users are maintained by the users themselves.

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Okay, so if someone listening is inspired by this movement and wants to get started,

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the technology can sometimes be intimidating?

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It can be, yeah.

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Are there beginner-friendly installation paths, or is this strictly for people who

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enjoy writing code on weekends?

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The good news is, getting started isn't nearly as hard as it sounds, which is a

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major victory for the platform.

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The sources outline a very clear path for beginners, emphasizing one-click sites.

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One-click sites.

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Yep.

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Known to work seamlessly on hosts like Reclaim Hosting and Dream Host, which often

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include these pre-packaged one-click installation features.

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So the technical barrier basically disappears?

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For most people, yes. You install it the way you'd install a basic app on your

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phone.

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Okay, that removes the setup nightmare.

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But for those who are curious, or who might be considering self-hosting for maximum

11:52

control, what are the basic technical requirements, just for context?

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Right, for the self-hosters among you, it's important to know.

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Known is under active development, so it needs a modern server environment.

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Which means?

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It requires PHP 8.1 or newer, with a few extensions, along with a supported

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database like MySQL.

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And importantly, if you're managing dependencies like installing new features or

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updating the platform, you'll be using a tool called Composer.

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What exactly is Composer in this context?

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Composer is the standard package and dependency manager in the PHP world.

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It's what tells the known installation what other pieces of software it needs to

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function.

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Mentioning it just shows that this is a professional modern project.

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And because this is an open source project, licensed under the Apache Software License

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2.0,

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that ability to collaborate is open to everyone, right?

12:43

Absolutely.

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The Apache License means it's fully open source, you can use it, modify it,

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distribute your own modifications.

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And this active community is key to its development.

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You can see that through the open support channels.

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You can.

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Things like the known dev mailing list and the IRC channel, hashtag knownchat on

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freenode.

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This isn't some abandoned project.

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It's a vibrant community pushing the platform forward.

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And even for users who are already up and running, there's still room for advanced

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customization.

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The sources mention custom JavaScript and CSS.

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I assume that's how you can fundamentally change the site's look and feel.

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Precisely.

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Or add your own analytics trackers without asking for permission.

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Gives you maximum flexibility to tailor the experience.

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You are not bound by themes or templates imposed by the platform.

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You control the front end entirely.

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And to connect this back to the bigger picture.

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Known has over a thousand stars on GitHub.

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It has continuous releases.

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It reflects a vibrant, sustained community.

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It's a serious player in the decentralized web movement.

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So what does this all mean for you, the learner?

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We've covered the philosophy, the features, and the technical backbone.

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That's a lot.

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It is.

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But Known is a powerful, flexible, open source tool for anyone who's serious about

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owning their content.

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It offers simple, responsive publishing alongside deep control.

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That control comes from custom URLs, granular privacy settings,

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and the ability to seamlessly integrate into that broader decentralized Indie web.

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It means that the choice you face today isn't between a slick platform and a clumsy

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one?

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No, not anymore.

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It's between a platform that owns your data and one that gives you the tools to

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host and own it yourself.

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Known is a working example of a movement that says your thoughts, photos, and

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stories belong to you.

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Not to a corporation's server farm.

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Exactly.

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And that ownership doesn't have to mean technical paralysis.

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And as we wrap up this deep dive, that raises a really important question for you

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to consider.

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If the web should be fully open and tools like Known exist to make that possible

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without being

14:42

a programming genius, what future advancements or feature conveniences would it

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take for the

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majority of users to abandon the ease of the walled garden and commit to content

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ownership?

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That's the million dollar question.

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Is the convenience of that corporate lease agreement truly worth forfeiting control

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over

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your entire digital archive?

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Something certainly to mull over as you browse your favorite social feeds today?

15:05

Definitely.

15:06

This deep dive into open publishing and content ownership was brought to you by

15:10

Safe Server.

15:11

They help with hosting and digital transformation, so find out more about how they

15:14

can support your

15:15

shift to digital ownership at www.safeserver.de.

15:19

We'll see you next time.

15:19

We'll see you next time.