In spite of some doubts (so many Web sites question my humanity - can they all be wrong?), I just proclaimed myself human, following the protocol at

https://codeberg.org/robida/human.json

It's an interesting initiative, building a Web of trust that needs to be navigated carefully, given that any single declaration might be fake. That's why vouching for people who have their own human.json is vital, as I just did for @gedankenstuecke .

human.json

A lightweight protocol for humans to assert authorship of their website content and vouch for the humanity of others.

Codeberg.org
If you would like me to vouch for you, and you are fine with the rules, send me a DM!
@khinsen just added your page & blog to my page to vouch 🙂
@gedankenstuecke @khinsen that's a really cool idea - I just tried to implement this on my site as well (I hope I did it correctly) and now vouch for both of you :)
@Flummic I think it worked partially, I see a list of trusted pages , but @khinsen's seems not included :)
@gedankenstuecke @khinsen Thanks for the headsup... can I refresh this somehow? Because I have already included khinsen in the file (I host it on Codeberg because I don't think I can add a custom file to Ghost directly: https://codeberg.org/Flummic/Flummic.com/raw/branch/main/human.json

@khinsen I just added it to my website too (listed on my profile) and listed your site. Would be happy to make it into your list, since you are offering. 🙏

I recently saw this other experimentation of a similar idea, which requires javascript instead of a browser extension: https://codeberg.org/susam/wander

wander

A tiny, decentralised tool you can host with just two files to explore the small web

Codeberg.org