Interestingly, if you put .json after an account url, you get a JSON object that has different content from the .rss version.

Here's a screen shot.

Can anyone explain what this is? Looks like it represents my account here, not the posts I've published?

@davew,

The #JSON file represents an accounts #ActivityStream covering a variety of activities.

This makes @Mastodon content highly accessible and interoperable with other productivity tools.

In my case, the JSON and #RSS data ends up in a #DataSpace that can be queried using full-text search patterns, #FacetedSearch, #SQL, #SPARQL, and #GraphQL.

/cc @judell

#OpenWeb