If Russia can block it, it’s not distributed…
https://therecord.media/russia-cracks-down-bluesky-internet
Russia appears to block social media platform Bluesky amid wider internet restrictions

Russian digital rights organization RKS Global told Recorded Future News that Bluesky had been added to the registry of banned websites maintained by Russia’s communications watchdog Roskomnadzor.

@benpate this is interesting.

Is there a *Sky in Russia, like Eurosky, Gander, Blacksky or Northsky? (I should know what these are called. I think it's more than a PDS, but maybe that's the right word.)

Trot-sky would be a sick name, but I don't think the pun would translate well.

@benpate the reason I ask is that I wonder how well ATProto federation works across borders when there's this kind of lockdown.

@benpate ActivityPub might work well in this case, but also badly. For example, if the Russian government blocked mastodon.social, the server-to-server data works on the same protocol and port number as the end-user interface and API.

But on the plus side, there are 40,000 other servers, so you'd still could stay connected to a big chunk of the Fediverse.

@benpate that said, I was doing some data analysis on fedidb last night, and about 50% of Fediverse users are on the top 10 servers, so it wouldn't take a lot of work to really cut down on the addressable accounts.

@benpate

ATProto works differently, on another port I think. I think there's also some indirect ways to share data, although I don't know a lot about how ATProto works so I might be mistaken.

@benpate @evan

Different enough than what we know of fedi doesn’t apply.

Bsky is boats and fedi is trains

I think they could block access to the main relay of bsky, but someone else could host an appview and relay themselves and as long as your user isnt on the main bsky pds you’re fine


#Could-be-a-headache #but-different-than-fedi #but-just-like-fedi-you-can-skip-it