We followed this practice at a Non-Profit I volunteered for some years ago. For us, it was motivated by a few reasons:<p>- we trained the community around us to look to our website first for the most recent news and information<p>- we did not want a social media platform to be able to cut us off from our community (on purpose or accident) by shuttering accounts or groups<p>- we did not want to require our users have accounts on any 3rd party platforms in order to access our postings<p>- but we still wanted to distribute our messaging across any platforms where large groups of our community members frequently engaged<p>Another aspect of our process that was specific to our situation and outside of POSSE - we only posted one topic/issue/announcement per blog post. We had a news letter that would summarize each of these. Many organizations like ours would post summaries of many things to a single blog post, basically the same as the newsletter. However, this was cumbersome. For example, if someone in the community had a question, it was much clearer to link to a single post on our site that answered the question AND ONLY answered that question. It made for much better community engagement, better search engine indexing, cleaner content management, and just a better experience for everyone involved.
There is a balance to be struck though. Microblogging services like Mastodon make it extremely easy to publish short posts with very low friction. That low friction helps people write more. Whether that's a good thing or bad lies in the eyes of the beholder. If publishing on your own website has higher friction than posting to something like Mastodon, then following POSSE too strictly can end up discouraging you from publishing at all.<p>Personally, I follow POSSE to a large extent, although I didn't know this term until recently. It is essentially how personal websites and sharing worked in the early 2000s. However, I also post freely to microblogging services like Mastodon on instances run by someone else, without worrying too much about POSSE. Occasionally, a microblog post grows into something that needs more than a paragraph. When that happens, I turn it into a proper blog post on my own website and then share it back out.<p>Finally, if you run your own Mastodon instance, as many people do, there is a bit of an overlap between publishing on your own site (POS) and syndicating elsewhere (SE), since one of the places you are syndicating to lives in your own website. I do not do this myself, as I prefer to keep my hobby infrastructure simple: no heavy services, just Nginx serving static HTML as my POS and someone else's Mastodon instance for SE.
I don't do any syndication so my self-published site is simply a POS :'(<p>Somewhat related, predictions for the future of the web by IWC contritbutors:<p><a href="https://vhbelvadi.com/indieweb-carnival-round-up-dec-2025" rel="nofollow">https://vhbelvadi.com/indieweb-carnival-round-up-dec-2025</a>
> Syndication can be done fully automatically by the server<p>At the risk of stating the obvious: this can get tricky, many popular social media platforms restrict automated posting. Policies around api usage and automation can change often and may not even be fully public as some might overlap anti spam measures.
I've restarted blogging last year, going from a handful of blog post to, publishing consistently. All content gets published on my blog first. I've seen an ~8x increase of traffic. I was affected by zero-clicks from Google's AI overview, but the bulk of my traffic now comes from RSS readers.<p>I published a write up just this morning: <a href="https://idiallo.com/blog/what-its-like-blogging-in-2025" rel="nofollow">https://idiallo.com/blog/what-its-like-blogging-in-2025</a>
I really want to implement this, but i havent been able to figure out how to do it for Instagram (the only social media that is really relevant in my friend circle) and whatsapp/signal groups other than doing it manually.
If anyone has tips, especially for Insta let me know...
This strategy is an alternative to PESOS (Publish Elsewhere, Syndicate (to your) Own Site) [0]. I really like this read on the indieweb website, it explains well why adopt this strategy for federation and emphasizes that "Friends are more important than federation", something a lot of nerds and hackers forget when defending their ideals.<p>[0]: <a href="https://indieweb.org/PESOS" rel="nofollow">https://indieweb.org/PESOS</a>
You can have both! POSSE to post multiple places. PESOS to pull in anything posted directly in other places, i.e. anything that didn't originate from a POSSE post.
POSSE offers a single source of truth the owner owns, vs PESOS which has multiple source of truth not owned by the owner if it's an external site.
I really like this philosophy. I've been using it for a couple of years now - everything goes on my personal site, then I post links on Mastodon, Bluesky and Twitter and sometimes (if I remember to do so) LinkedIn, plus copy and paste it all into a Substack email every week or so.<p>I really need to automate it though - hard on Twitter and LinkedIn but still pretty easy for Bluesky and Mastodon.
If we had stuck with standard semantic web microformats, RSS/Atom syndication, FOAF-ish graphs, URIs for identity but also anonymous pubkey identities with reputation graphs - we could have built an entirely distributed social media graph that worked like email.<p>But alas, Facebook pushed forward too fast to counter.<p>There's still a chance, but the software needs to focus on simplicity and ease of use. Publishing blobs of signed content that can be added to anything - HTML pages, P2P protocols, embedded into emails and tweets - maybe we can hijack the current systems and have distributed identity and publishing take over.
You can tell it's a good idea because Facebook and other "big enough to crush instead of cooperate" media sites down-rank you for doing it
It’s almost like HN is a great platform for the POSSE model!<p>Awesome share thanks for the link. Will send to a family member who is looking to gain viewership with their writing - they usually post on medium I think.
Someone recommended Posse Party in a now deleted comment, but beware its (ambiguous and poorly written, if you ask me) noncommercial license:<p><a href="https://github.com/searlsco/posse_party/blob/main/LICENSE.txt" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/searlsco/posse_party/blob/main/LICENSE.tx...</a>
Awesome initiative. Will delve into this. It's how the web should be.
Related:<p><i>Ask HN: Is starting a personal blog still worth it in the age of AI?</i><p><a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46268055">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46268055</a><p><i>A website to destroy all websites</i><p><a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46457784">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46457784</a>
If only HN had been doing this almost since it's inception. Oh wait.
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POSSE can be applied to more than just social networks, it can be used to disrupt every marketplace!<p>In fact, I’m building open source SaaS for every vertical and leveraging that to build an interoperable, decentralized marketplace.<p>Social media is a marketplace as well. The good being sold is people’s content and the cost you pay is with your attention. The marketplace’s cut is ads and selling your data.
This post like many recent ones like it, essentially wants the internet to go backwards to what it once was pre-LLMs. I'd like to suggest that you should follow through and go all the way to pre-internet itself, and rediscover handwriting, in-person local meeting groups, non-digital relationships, and using your hands not on a keyboard. Today I (with difficulty) left my macbook closed all day until this evening (and this comment). Small steps.
I read this as an ownership issue, where Meta owns your content as long as you post on Facebook or Instagram, and has nothing to do with LLMs.
I understand this attitude but when I look back at my rural youth I just hear you telling me that I should have had no one to talk to at all about many things.<p>Let's not throw out the baby with the bathwater