IndieWeb
Movement to self-host and control web content
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
IndieWeb is a community of people building software to enable personal independently hosted websites to maintain their social data on their own web domains rather than on large, centralized social networking services. The community uses a suite of tools including Webmention[1][2] and microformats[3] to decentralize social communication and distribution of content.
History
The concept underlying the community was first developed at a series of conferences known as IndieWebCamp by Tantek Çelik, Amber Case, Aaron Parecki, Crystal Beasley[4] and Kevin Marks.[5][6][7]
Principles
The IndieWeb[8] is based on 10 core principles:[9]
- Own your data.[10]
- Use & publish visible data for humans first, machines second.
- Make what you need.
- Use what you make.
- Document your stuff.
- Open source your stuff.
- UX and design is more important than protocols, formats, data models, schema etc.[3]
- Modularity.[11]
- Longevity.[12]
- Plurality.[13][14]
and an informal eleventh: "Above all, Have fun."