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Original post on indieweb.social

✍️ IndieWeb Carnival: Museum Memories

It seems like fate that James chose Museum Memories of this month’s #IndiewebCarnival, because just recently, by chance, I visited one of the most impressive places from my childhood after more than 40 years: the Deutsches Museum in Munich. My wife and I […]

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Original post on mementomori.social

I’m a developer with a degree in philology and linguistics. Here’s how these two passions have shaped each other, and me.

🌐 https://blog.gridranger.dev/intersecting-interests/

This post was inpired by the monthly #indiewebcarnival theme chosen by Zachary Kai.

#writingprompt #blog #post […]

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Original post on indieweb.social

✍️ IndieWeb Carnival: Intersecting Interests

Complementary and Contrary Passions

When I read about this month’s #IndiewebCarnival topic (Intersecting Interests by Zachary Kai) I initially misunderstood ‘intersecting’ as interests that cross paths and thus get in the way, but what is meant is […]

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January 2026 IndieWeb Carnival Roundup For this month’s IndieWeb Carnival, people shared their thoughts on the meaning of their lives.

20+ people responded to the 2026-01 #IndieWebCarnival topic of the meaning of life. I linked them all with my favorite lines from each in the roundup.

www.jeremiahlee.com/posts/2026-01-indieweb-c...

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Fixer I do not know the meaning of my life, but I find purpose in being a fixer architype and hope to one day fix something meaningful to others. This is my entry about the meaning of life for the 2026-01 IndieWeb Carnival.

My submission to the 2026-01 #IndieWebCarnival: how activists taught me to turn righteous anger into a passion for fixing

www.jeremiahlee.com/posts/fixer/

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IndieWeb Carnival: Feb 2026 It's the Feb 2026 IndieWeb Carnival! This month, the theme is Intersecting Interests.

I think this month's IndieWeb Carnival blogging challenge will appeal to a lot of people here.

"Our hobbies, passions, and curiosities rarely exist in neat boxes. They bleed into each other."

https://zacharykai.net/notes/icfeb26

#IndieWeb #IndieWebCarnival #blogging

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RE: https://alpaca.gold/@Jeremiah/115822346560955807

Do you have a personal website? Do you need a little motivation and deadline to write? Do you have an existential crisis at least once a year like I do? Then join the #IndieWebCarnival this month!

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January 2026 IndieWeb Carnival 3 AM thoughts on hope and gratitude in the time of the decline of the US empire

For this month’s IndieWeb Carnival, I want to know your thoughts on the meaning of life.

Why? I’m about to turn 42, the answer to the ultimate question of life, the universe, and everything.

www.jeremiahlee.com/posts/2026-01-indieweb-c...

#IndieWebCarnival

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IndieWeb Carnival Dec ’25 round-up Many thanks to all the contributors to this month’s IndieWeb carnival. The prompt asked you to tell us _where you see the IndieWeb in 2030_ , inviting writings on what the IndieWeb means for you, how you see its near future, what you think about its orientations, all with a view to realisable aims or critiques for the next five years. I had a great time reading all your submissions, listed below with a short summary,1 in the order in which I received them. There was variety in the contributions, but also several common threads that I have attempted to highlight in this round-up without overshadowing individual contributions. I found them insightful and have no doubt everyone else too will feel similarly. If you are one of the contributors, or are just here for the round-up, and have not done so already, it would mean a lot to me if you could please leave a note in my guestbook. * * * _**Chris**_ Writing on the _Outer Web_ (what a great name) in ‘2030’ Chris reflects on how the fundamentals of the IndieWeb will (and should) remain intact while calling for a ‘denser and more discoverable’ web in the coming years. An interesting idea Chris proposes is a ‘related posts’-style section at the end of every post, except with links to _others_ websites with related content instead of our own. _**Andrei**_ In ‘Cyberpunk 2030’ we find an assortment of troubles plaguing the internet today – including the IndieWeb – from platform moderators upending projects to codebase maintainers who are ‘just as toxic … as Elon Musk himself, except they’re poor.’ The constants that can elevate the IndieWeb, says Andrei, are the people who make it up – people who can be their true selves and value connections with other people like them. _**Cameron Jones**_ Looking ahead in three flavours – wishfully first, then realistically and finally with pessimism – Cameron introduces a host of new ideas in ‘Three predictions for the web’, from event pages and fora to interoperability and state crackdowns on the pseudoanonymity of the web. I do not want to spoil anything in this dense and rich article but I would recommend a cup of tea and a pocket book to take notes. _**Anthony Nelzin-Santos**_ Adding a unique twist to the contributions this month, Anthony writes to us from a dystopian 2031 in ‘They said the web was dead’, long after the internet as we now know it is no more and Apple and Google have monopolised their replacement _newnet_. However, older OSes and insecure connections can still help you hook up to the ‘world wild web’ as you use the Internet phone book to explore the so-called _indieweb_. Alright, now go read this in full and, like me, pine for a sequel. _**Juha-Matti Santala**_ Reflecting in his ‘rocky and ever-evolving’ relationship with the IndieWeb, Juhis writes in ‘Where are we going, IndieWeb?’ that the IndieWeb is just one alternative to the CorpoWeb, not the only one. It should continue to be more aspirational in nature, he recommends, but it should not gatekeep, and doing that means thinking about a balance between commercial and DIY set-ups: when it comes to technicalities Juhis points out that it is ‘really difficult to reduce these to a minimum without turning the entire thing into a commercial-ish service.’ _**Bobby Hiltz**_ is new to the IndieWeb, which means he is in the unique position of being able to address one of my prompts to hold a mirror up to the IndieWeb folk. Unsurprisingly, there is a _lot_ to think about in ‘IndieWeb 2030’, from how we should look at the IndieWeb as an alternative rather than a competitor to working on the existing, weak documentation for newcomers to IndieWeb sites not being ‘fun’ enough. There is healthy criticism here that is worth reflecting on for everyone who wants the IndieWeb to keep getting better and stay meaningful. And finally, predicts Bobby, Gen Z are around the corner and we are in for some fun times. _**Manuel Moreale**_ Continuing the trend of holding a mirror to the IndieWeb, this time from deep within it, Manu writes, ‘Where do I wish to see the IndieWeb in 2030’. The web is a mess, he says, and we should stop ‘pretending that the fault for all this digital mess lies entirely on the shoulders of a few mega corporations.’ He hopes that by 2023, in a web that is likely still as messy, we will, at least, have realised that the people matter more. * * * Looking to the past to gain a better understanding of the future is both sensible and clever, which is why so many people have approached this carnival theme in that way. While we have looked inwards aplenty so far, gaining lots of insights in the process, we have up next essays that propose a more thorough plan for working over the next five years, that seek to engage with the conflicting emotions of an AI-driven future, that hope for openness and flexibility and suggest that the IndieWeb has already captured the zeitgeist. * * * _**Paul Watson**_ Offerring a unique perspective on how things used to be back in the day, in ‘Where do I see the IndieWeb in 2030?’ Paul reflects on a unique old ISP practice that just might help lower the bar for newcomers to the IndieWeb. But in 2030 Paul believs things might not be all that different from now. _**Khürt Williams**_ Reminiscing that ‘the web was distributed by default’ before social media pushed us to surrender our agency, Khürt writes in ‘An Island in the Net in 2030?’ that, going forward, we should embrace tools that ‘could rebuild what we’d lost’ and the fact that we have not already done so points to an active choice on our part to disregard a more open web. This is a timely argument that questions why people positioned to help the wider web adopt precisely such tools – like Wordpress theme developers – are simply not embracing the standards that can help them do just that. Khürt provides a comprehensive pathway for achieving this by 2030, reminding us that ‘autonomy isn’t a luxury. It’s fundamental.’ _**William Jansson**_ On the IndieWeb ‘the barrier to entry is still relatively high’ writes William in his contribution to the IndieWeb Carnival. I like how this piece talks about the general idea of ease that it predicts by 2030 but with conflicting feelings. But the noise and chaos of an AI-powered web of the future will spur humans on in their search for ‘smaller, quiet spaces and genuine human connection’ because there is more to the IndieWeb beyond achieving technical ease. _**Bekah**_ Less proselytising but more awareness of the IndieWeb as an alternative is one of Bekah’s hopes for the IndieWeb in 2030. Besides this, she calls for helping servers on the Fediverse and offers examples of a variety of tools because having such choices ‘encourages openness’. Public behaviour can subsequently dictate corporate response. I really liked that Bekah also discussed something I’ve previously been interested in2 myself: that the IndieWeb is an important but little-recognised part of our shared history. She hopes archiving as a practice grows in the future. There are a lot layers I see in this essay and I am tempted to address them all, but instead I will urge you to go read it with a critical eye instead. _**James**_ The IndieWeb is whatever it means to us all at a given point in time. A call for continued openness and flexibility is central to James’s thoughts about the IndieWeb in 2030, which correctly recognises that in this carnival ‘we’re discussing and making the culture with its own medium’ and that we are all here largely because we see this space as our own, to do with it what we will. But pertinent questions are raised: how many tools are too many, is expansion generally the right direction for the IndieWeb to go, and must we not try to make being in the IndieWeb more than just the act of getting on board? _**Chris Shaw**_ ‘We all depend on wifi,’ writes Chris, ‘but very few of us are visiting the IEEE 802.11 website to see how it works.’ A fun analogy to the point that in the next five years AI will reduce the ‘technical hurdles’ in setting up a website. Without worrying about the nitty gritty of it, many more people will take to the indie web, says Chris, making sure to point out to the difference between the ‘indie web’ and the ‘IndieWeb’. The latter will continue to weave and advocate for its principles as it guides the former. This piece offers a very grounded outlook with which to end this month’s carnival. _**Alexey Staroselets**_ If you seek a contribution with lots of juicy predictions, Alexey has you covered. From digital minimalism and IRC to e-ink and LoRa, in ‘Where do I see the IndieWeb in 2032’ we have an ambitious checklist for all the IndieWeb needs to (try to) be in the next five years: ‘diverse, uneven, decentralised, fragmented, and bizarre.’ I love that Alexey’s choice of picture to go with this article is one that pictures children’s seriousness in playing their games. _Is that comparable to our exploits on the IndieWeb?_ * * * Did we mention the IndieWeb is all about the people who make it up? Well, if you did not spot it before, you should be seeing it plain as day by now: if there is something we can all agree on, apparently, it is that the people on the IndieWeb are at the centre of it. Not the protocols, not the platforms, not the practices, but the people. This is all fitting, in my mind, for a community that loves to talk about itself, for people who enjoy writing about themselves and so on. There is not much wrong with that, but as the next few contributions show, this tendency can shape how the IndieWeb itself grows abstract in the next few years, positions itself in comparison with the CorpoWeb, remain welcoming, eclectic and even opinionated, ultimately going on to seek a better definition for itself. * * * _**Sara Jakša**_ Dissecting the technical debt and the technical graveyard of the IndieWeb, full of projects started but going nowhere, abandoned, not as publicised as they ought to be and disproportionately reliant on the drive individual developers have to see their work out in the world, Sara writes in ‘The IndieWeb in 2030: The Code, The People and Me’ that ‘the IndieWeb community will probably become less cohesive in the next five years … with some social norms, actions and values that will allow us to band together’. What Sara values most, in the middle of all this, are the people on the IndieWeb. _**Leon Paternoster**_ The IndieWeb is ‘grounded in a set of late-2010s concerns and view of the web’ writes Leon in ‘Defining the indieweb for 2026’, and there is little benefit in ‘trying to recreate social media on websites through protocols and processes such as POSSE and webmentions’. (On a completely unrelated matter, I learnt of Leon’s contribution through a webmention.) Jokes apart, I think there is an excellent point here, and one that is – to my liking – made very directly: there has long been some conflation of what blogs are and where they stand in the grand scheme of internet things and, more importantly, in the scale from personal spaces to public broadcast networks. So Leon proposes an updated definition of the IndieWeb, one I will not spoil for you by reproducing here in full, but it centres on the fact that the IndieWeb is a ‘people-focused alternative’ to the CorpoWeb. _**Jeff Porter**_ Reminding us, once again, of the crucial difference between the IndieWeb and the indie web, Jeff says in ‘I’m part of the indie web with a small “i”’, ‘I consider this site part of the ‘indie web’, or part of nothing, whichever you prefer.’ If this month’s carnival has taught me anything it is that by various definitions my own site is not part of the IndieWeb either. But I agree with Jeff’s identification of the minimum requirement being to ‘set up a domain … set up hosting, create pages’ and that is all. The terminology can be sorted out another day. _**Dominik Hofer**_ Reaffirming the thoughts expressed by our previous contributor, Dominik agrees that ‘just having a personal website … makes you part’ of the IndieWeb. But there is a much-needed social aspect that is missing. In ‘A more social IndieWeb’ Dominik suggests a new form of RSS,3 with social components like interactions and discovery, in comparison to the AT Protocol (famously used in BlueSky) and how blogging platforms like Leaflet are implementing this. This is a fascinating read and one that I for one, as somewhat a fan of the AT Protocol, would like to see explored further. _**scarfdog.paunix.org**_ ‘Give up compatibility with the corporate Web. Flee the corporate Web,’ writes the incognito author of this contribution, ‘Independent web browsers’. They make a unique case for abandoning javascript altogether and view the IndieWeb as one of the few places where you have usable webpages even in the absence of javascript support. While I am not a fan of calls to abandon javascript entirely (I use it on this website), I think this post is important for its unique perspective and because progressive enhancement should be more widespread. If, as they say, ‘by 2030, Ladybird [the indie browser] will probably have become a major web browser player’, then webpages that are usable without javascript will be the standouts compared with CorpoWeb sites that rely greatly on it. _**Jeppe Winther**_ Not much will have changed by 2030 says Jeppe in ‘The IndieWeb in 2030?’, describing how people will continue to come and go and tech will continue to be created and abandoned, as is in the nature of indie movements. ‘That is a plus not a negative,’ he reminds us, suggesting that if anything needs to change at all, it is how things should be more accessible to newcomers. Jeppe looks back to the 2000s for this when Blogger and its ilk made space for absolute newcomers and not just ‘techminded people’. What can I say? _I agree._ _**Lee Perry**_ In ‘The IndieWeb in 2030’, Lee writes that to be as attractive as social media ‘the IndieWeb has to be easy to join, and easy to participate in,’ especially if it wants to ‘grow beyond the fairly narrow cohort it attracts today.’ But this should be positioned as an alternative to the CorpoWeb, not compete with it – a notion many other contributors agree with. One way to about this is to create an IndieWeb-as-a-service solution. But will it help Lee find a third Burnley fan to talk to? ~~That might be more of a Burnley problem.~~ * * * That is it for the round-up this time. I hope you enjoyed it and that you enjoy reading these wonderful contributions even more. Lastly, my own contribution to this carnival discusses the sort of AI I want to see (and not) on the IndieWeb in the coming years. If you wrote something for this month’s theme but could not send it to me – or worse, if you did and I overlooked it (I apologise) – please send me an e-mail and I will attach it to this round-up. Up next is the IndieWeb Carnival for January 2026, hosted by Jeremiah Lee on an undeniably interesting topic: _the meaning of life._ Please consider making a contribution to the carnival if you can so we can keep this wonderful IndieWeb initiative going. * * * 1. I had to restrict myself this time because I wrote a paragraph for each submission the last time I hosted a carnival, probably leaving everyone with far more to read than they ever expected. ↩ 2. See ‘Relics of the future’. ↩ 3. Although Dominik calls this RSS 2.0 I suspect it should be 3.0 since the current spec already is the second version. ↩

Looking for something interesting to read today? Here’s a round up of all the entries from last month’s #IndieWebCarnival reflecting on where the #IndieWeb will be – or where we all want it to be – by 2030.

vhbelvadi.com/indieweb-carnival-round-...

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A more social IndieWeb | Dominik Hofer My entry for the IndieWeb Carnival of December 2025 about the IndieWeb in 2030.

My just-in-time submission for this month's IndieWeb Carnival, hosted by @vhbelvadi.com on the topic of the IndieWeb in 2030:

dominikhofer.me/social-indie-web

#indiewebcarnival #socialweb #atprotocol #activitypub

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January Hackathon Kickoff

New Year's Day there'll be a kickoff Zoom for #IndieWeb hackathon in January. It'll be a bit like #IndieWebCarnival events but centered on improving software used for indie websites ~ testing, coding, validating. events.indieweb.org/2026/01/janu... Hosted by @ciccarello.me

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IndieWeb Carnival Dec ’25 Welcome to the last IndieWeb Carnival of 2025. Having been a part of this wonderful community for years now and having thought about the IndieWeb from various perspectives, I have plenty of ideas about where I hope we are headed in the near future. And I am sure you do too. So tell us, **where do you see the IndieWeb in 2030** , just five short years from now? * * * **Read next:** * How to submit your entry * Some prompts and more on the theme * What carnival? If you have not participated in an IndieWeb Carnival before, if you would like to see how others are doing it, have a look at round-ups of past IndieWeb carnivals hosted by amazing people from around the world. And remember, the best time to participate is now – or at least before you get busy with everything else around the new year. * * * ## How to submit your entry _**E-mail**_ Send me your entires for this month by e-mail linking to your published post. My inbox is open to further discussions too, if you fancy it. _**Social web**_ You can mention me on Mastodon especially if you plan to share your writing there anyway. I am also on BlueSky if you prefer that instead. _**Webmention**_ Webmentions are working on this website so please feel free to link back to this page. You can check if I have received your webmention by looking for your name near the bottom of this page. In any of these cases, if you have not heard from me after three days, please do not hesitate to send me an e-mail reminder. A round-up post will appear on this website by the first week of January. You can subscribe by RSS in the meanwhile or check back manually on the IndieWeb carnival wiki. * * * ## Some prompts and more about the theme _Why five years?_ It is one thing to have a vague idea about the IndieWeb, it is a completely different thing to have concrete, achievable desires. It is the latter in which I am interested, but please feel free to write about longer-term wishes that serve to highlight your vision. Ideally, I hope that the roundup of submissions by the end of this month can serve as a pot of ideas for developers to work on for the technological infrastructure powering IndieWeb features, if not prompt some new lines of thinking; for fellow bloggers/gardeners/wordsmiths to get together and create something new on their corner of the IndieWeb; for everyone, generally, to try their hand at new ideas and practices that others might put forward; or even to find like-minded individuals for some new collaborative projects. At the very least I hope the submissions for this carnival stand as a time capsule that records what we all thought of and wished for for the future of the IndieWeb as 2026 came knocking. There has been some chatter on these lines already, such as on self-hosting and whether more approachable tech is necessarily the right answer for a more populated IndieWeb (e.g. Bix’s roundup from October), how sometimes the IndieWeb can be difficult, and much more besides. If you have written about something like this a few times in the recent past, it would be great to see a consolidation of your thoughts submitted to this carnival. * * * Below are some prompts – should you need them – to help you get started with your own piece. While arguments may predominantly favour one view, counterpoints are welcome and even encouraged. * What existing features of the IndieWeb bother you, either technologically or philosophically? * How better can the IndieWeb stand up to the CorpoWeb in the coming years? * Does the IndieWeb feel lonely, and if so how can we make it feel more like a community? * What radically new idea do you have for the IndieWeb that you haven’t been able to communicate to someone with the skills to build it? * If you are new to the IndieWeb, hold a mirror up to the IndieWeb folk: help us see ourselves differently, improve and become better. * If there is something about the status quo that you especially like, what is it and why should it be protected at all costs? * Are you building something for the IndieWeb? This would be a great time to showcase it, whether alpha, beta or production-ready. * How has participating in the IndieWeb, even if only by writing regularly on your blog, affected you and how do you see it affecting you in the years to come? In other words, cast aside the broad IndieWeb for a moment and tell us where you see yourself in this context five years from now. Feel free to address as many topics as you like or go all-in on a specific feature, practice or idea you feel passionate about. * * * ## About the IndieWeb Carnival Each month someone hosts the IndieWeb Carnival with a theme of their choice. Anyone can write essays/short posts about the theme, publish it on their own website, and share the link with the month’s host. At the end of the month, the host rounds up all submissions and publishes them – sometimes along with some commentary – as a compilation of that month’s edition of the IndieWeb Carnival. If you have never been part of a carnival before, the time to get involved is now. You will find the IndieWeb is a very welcoming space.

The #IndieWebCarnival is underway as always and there’s about a week left if you’d like to contribute to this month’s theme: share your thoughts on the future you see (or hope) for the #IndieWeb.

More here: https://vhbelvadi.com/indieweb-carnival-future

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Original post on indieweb.social

RE: https://islandinthenet.com/indieweb-2030/

What a great contribution from @khurtwilliams for this month’s #IndieWebCarnival – autonomy is fundamental and theme designers on large platforms like Wordpress adopting IndieWeb standards can make a substantial change, but the rest of us have to […]

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Original post on indieweb.social

Yet another wonderful contribution to the #IndieWebCarnival from @bbbhltz full of thoughtful critiques of the IndieWeb from someone confessedly new to it.

I especially liked this take: ‘Standing up to the “Corporate Web” should not be seen as a battle, but an indirect competition. It is just an […]

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IndieWeb 2030 For the ultimate IndieWeb Carnival of 2025, V.H. Belvadi asks us where we think the IndieWeb will be in 2030. I saw the term IndieWeb being used for a time before I decided to dig a little deeper. Pay a visit to the IndieWeb homepage, and you’ll know if it is something for you or not. I am still quite new to the IndieWeb in some ways. I have participated a few times in this monthly carnival of blog posts, and this time I certainly appreciate having a few prompts to get me started. ## What existing features of the IndieWeb bother you, either technologically or philosophically? The things that bother me about the IndieWeb might also be the things that attracted me to it. There are lots of definitions and terms and building blocks. There always seems to be another resource, another link, another wiki. The documentation and the technology make it such a modular stack of things, and there are broken links and abandoned projects here and there. It should be frustrating, but since I am not an experienced website developer, all of this digging around has pushed me to learn a few things. Some of them are superfluous, like Webmentions and Microformats. But others are very useful (more on that later). ## How better can the IndieWeb stand up to the Corporate Web in the coming years? Some people like to find a recipe, buy the ingredients, and tweak to taste. Other people like to follow the recipe to the letter. And still other people like to buy their cake frozen or from a bakery. Standing up to the “Corporate Web” should not be seen as a battle, but an indirect competition. It is just an alternative. I was pulled into the IndieWeb through Mastodon. I saw people talking about Gemini and had some free time and an extra Raspberry Pi, so I set it up. Then I figured that I could also host a regular static site. I thought it was great to _own_ the words I was sharing and have them as physical files on my computer. Not having an account on some site (WordPress or Blogger) was a contributing factor, being able to ask people on the Internet to help me sort things out was a bonus. The IndieWeb can stand up to corporate alternatives by highlighting the fact that even new users can be online and sharing within minutes because it isn’t as complicated as it seems. ## Does the IndieWeb feel lonely, and if so how can we make it feel more like a community? I’m fine with loneliness, but the IndieWeb is certainly a community if you decide to participate. I wasn’t paying attention to the chat, but they were paying attention to me. I would have appreciated an email, but it was nice to see that a discussion was had before banning me from the IndieWeb News Feed. I have also discovered that some sites I was already following are part of the IndieWeb. There is work to do to improve that community feeling, perhaps nominating sites to take part in the IndieWeb carnival rather than letting users volunteer. Some people, like me, need to be pushed into participating. ## If you are new to the IndieWeb, hold a mirror up to the IndieWeb folk: help us see ourselves differently, improve and become better. As a new user, there is an overlap with other concepts. Well, that’s how it feels. It also feels like an “onboarding process” when, in reality, it is not such a complicated affair. The documentation is the weakest thing about the IndieWeb: many pages are consistent, but there are others that focus on _criticism_ (there are over 400 criticism notes on the wiki). This is not gatekeeping, but a first-time visitor or window-shopper might notice this and think the community is biased in some way. After writing the paragraph above, I went searching for concrete examples. I couldn’t find any, but for some reason my brain is telling me that the wiki is full of criticism. Moving on, the principles of the IndieWeb should elevate the 11th principle: > Above all, Have fun. When the web took off in the 90s people began designing personal sites with tools such as GeoCities. These spaces often had Java applets, garish green background and seventeen animated GIFs. It may have been ugly and badly coded but it was fun. Keep the web weird and interesting. Many of the sites linked to on the IndieWeb wiki do not scream _FUN_. They are like my site: plain, straightforward, black text on white background, boring blogs. They look like what we would expect from the smolweb. The IndieWeb Webring is a much better showcase of fun. Some of the profiles shared on that webring are colourful affairs, overflowing with custom fonts, badges, GIFs, and other pixels that evoke the _web of the 90s_. ## How has participating in the IndieWeb, even if only by writing regularly on your blog, affected you, and how do you see it affecting you in the years to come? This is implied above, but I’ll repeat it here. I have learned things that have expanded my knowledge of how websites work. With some help, I have registered domains, used several static site generators, messed up and repaired my basic CSS, used pre-made frameworks, learned some Git commands, and submitted issues, PRs, and pushed to different forges (GitLab, GitHub, Codeberg, sourcehut, etc.). I have used some of this knowledge to help others with their sites, and sort out some _bugs_ at work. In the coming years, I hope to convince my partner to start their own blog. ## Where do I see the IndieWeb in 2030? The IndieWeb will still be plugging along in 2030. With the rise of LLMs and information silos, cyber-balkanization and age limits on social media, I think there could be a large wave of Gen Z arriving shortly. It may not resemble the current IndieWeb definition, but I can tell you this: I work with Gen Z on a daily basis, and they are weird in a fun way. If they start making their own blogs and sites, they will be weird and fun.

Well seems like Bobby wrote pretty much what I was going to write about #IndieWebCarnival 🤣

https://bobbyhiltz.com/posts/2025/12/indieweb-2030/

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Original post on indieweb.social

A quick mid-week reminder to everyone with a website of their own that there’s an #IndieWebCarnival going on this month, so if you’re looking for ideas to write about, look no further.

Tell the rest of the IndieWeb where you want to see it in five years. What are your plans, hopes, praises and […]

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Original post on indieweb.social

RE: https://mastodon.social/@z1nz0l1n/115662027862675898

This is fantastic! I’d like a sequel soon. (And thanks for reminding me I never got the Internet Phone Book.)

@z1nz0l1n writes back to us for this month’s #IndieWebCarnival on the future of the #IndieWeb from a dystopian 2031 that I, for […]

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RE: https://aus.social/@AuntyRed/115658918796263152

Quite a lot to think about in the latest contribution to this month’s #IndieWebCarnival from @AuntyRed about the future of the #IndieWeb, including the good, the bad and the ugly.

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Original post on indieweb.social

RE: https://mastodon.world/@hamatti/115638481043444144

Beat me to it—I was waiting for November to pass before I shared it here!

***

Anyone with a website or a dedicate space online where you write, join the #IndieWebCarnival where people around the world write on monthly themes.

This month […]

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A bit of a curve-ball contribution to this month’s IndieWeb Carnival theme ‘Cycles and fluctuations’ hosted by Alex Sirac. Sometimes I wish could just write about unicorns and rainbows. ~ #indieweb #indiewebcarnival #fa...

A bit of a curve-ball contribution to this month’s IndieWeb Carnival theme ‘Cycles and fluctuations’ hosted by Alex Sirac.
Sometimes I wish could just write about unicorns and rainbows.
~

#indieweb #indiewebcarnival #fa...
#democracy #usa #gop #fascists #fascism

👉 Vote 'em Out!

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midnightcircle a perspective: gatherings at the end of a day of mysteries and joys.

a small companion piece in addition to my contribution to this month's indieweb carnival theme, second person birds, hosted by @fractalkitty.com. a perspective: gatherings at the end of a day.

wavelight.ws/blog/2025092...

#secondpersonbirds #nature #birds #crow #indieweb #indiewebcarnival

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sablesounds a perspective: a sable coat, a sapphire morning, a montane chorus.

a small companion piece in addition to my contribution to this month's indieweb carnival theme, second person birds, hosted by @fractalkitty.com. a perspective: sable, sapphire, chorus.

wavelight.ws/blog/2025092...

#secondpersonbirds #nature #birds #redwingedblackbird #indieweb #indiewebcarnival

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jewellight a perspective: arrayed in iridescent tones, drifting through an afternoon of glittering colors, familiar voices, and nature's ever-shifting radiance.

drifting through an afternoon of iridescent colors and ever-shifting radiance. my contribution to this month's indieweb carnival, hosted by @fractalkitty.com: second person birds.

wavelight.ws/blog/2025092...

#secondpersonbirds #nature #birds #hummingbird #indieweb #indiewebcarnival

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colors impressions from walking through a season of colors; nature's manifold gorgeous hues at the end of the day.

impressions from walking through a season of colors; gorgeous hues at the end of the day. my contribution to this month's indieweb carnival: colors.

wavelight.ws/blog/2025082...

#nature #birds #colors #indieweb #indiewebcarnival

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Ross A. Baker: When a totem gets hijacked

This month's IndieWeb Carnival is about totems. I wrote about my trademark IU hat, and the disturbing things happening at the place it represents.

https://rossabaker.com/blog/when-a-totem-gets-hijacked/

#IndieWeb #IndieWebCarnival #Indiana #IU

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