I added our comments feeds to our feed list. Although I don't enable comments, the feed picks up our Webmentions and Refbacks.

https://thenewleafjournal.com/new-leaf-journal-feeds/

#rss #webmentions #refbacks

NLJ RSS and Atom Feeds

The New Leaf Journal is a proponent of RSS and Atom feeds. This page contains our site’s main feed, as well as author, category, and topic options.

The New Leaf Journal
Chris Aldrich

In reply to Refbacks for WordPress Version 2.0 Released. I love that this is already showing a refback from Loqi!

Chris Aldrich

Refbacks were almost all noise and very little signal for me. Pingbacks/Trackback look dreadful and aren’t well supported anymore, so I don’t receive many. Webmentions have been AWESOME and just required two simple plugins for WordPress. My very small personal site has gotten over 6,000 reactions/replies in the past year (with the help of backfeed, particularly from Brid.gy.)

The real win is that I can use my own website to converse with others and don’t need the big social silos the way I did several years ago.

https://boffosocko.com/2020/03/05/55768715/

backfeed

Backfeed is the process of syndicating interactions on your POSSE copies back (AKA reverse syndicating) to your original posts.

IndieWeb
Forcing webmentions for conversations on websites that don’t support Webmention Within the IndieWeb community there is a process called backfeed which is the process of syndicating interactions on your syndicated (POSSE) copies back (AKA reverse syndicating) to your original posts. As it’s commonly practiced, often with the ever helpful Brid.gy service, it is almost exclusively done with social media silos like Twitter, Instagram, Flickr, Github, and Mastodon. This is what allows replies to my content that I’ve syndicated to Twitter, for example, to come back and live here on my website. Why not practice this with other personal websites? This may become increasingly important in an ever growing and revitalizing blogosphere as people increasingly eschew corporate social sites and their dark patterns of tracking, manipulative algorithmic feeds, and surveillance capitalism. It’s also useful for sites whose owners may not have the inclination, time, effort, energy or expertise to support the requisite technology. I’ve done the following general reply pattern using what one might call manual backfeed quite a few times now (and I’m sure a few others likely have too), but I don’t think I’ve seen it documented anywhere as a common IndieWeb practice. As a point of fact, my method outlined below is really only half-manual because I’m cleverly leveraging incoming webmentions to reduce some of the work. Manually syndicating my replies Sometimes when using my own website to reply to another that doesn’t support the W3C’s Webmention spec, I’ll manually syndicate (a fancy way of saying cut-and-paste) my response to the website I’m responding to. In these cases I’ll either put the URL of my response into the body of my reply, or in sites like WordPress that ask for my website URL, I’ll use that field instead. Either way, my response appears on their site with my reply URL in it (sometimes I may have to wait for my comment to be moderated if the receiving site does that). Here’s the important part: Because my URL appears on the receiving site (sometimes wrapped as a link on either my name or the date/time stamp depending on the site’s user interface choices), I can now use it to force future replies on that site back to my original via webmention! My site will look for a URL pointing back to it to verify an incoming webmention on my site. Replies from a site that doesn’t support sending Webmentions Once my comment … <a href="" class="more-link">Continue reading <span class="screen-reader-text"></span></a> https://boffosocko.com/2020/01/30/manual-backfeed-in-the-blogosphere/
Manual Backfeed in the Blogosphere

Forcing manual webmentions for conversations on websites that don't support Webmention

Chris Aldrich

Manual Backfeed in the Blogosphere

Forcing webmentions for conversations on websites that don't support Webmention

Within the IndieWeb community there is a process called backfeed which is th

https://boffosocko.com/2020/01/30/manual-backfeed-in-the-blogosphere/

#IndieWeb #WordPress #backfeed #blogosphererevival #buildingblocks #commentposts #fragments #manualuntilithurts #manualwebmentions #microformats #POSSE #refbacks #replypost #smallpieceslooselyjoined #syndication #Webmention

Manual Backfeed in the Blogosphere

Forcing manual webmentions for conversations on websites that don't support Webmention

Chris Aldrich