ActivityPub Viewer

A small tool to view real-world ActivityPub objects as JSON! Enter a URL or username from Mastodon or a similar service below, and we'll send a request with the right Accept header to the server to view the underlying object.

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{ "@context": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams", { "ostatus": "http://ostatus.org#", "atomUri": "ostatus:atomUri", "inReplyToAtomUri": "ostatus:inReplyToAtomUri", "conversation": "ostatus:conversation", "sensitive": "as:sensitive", "toot": "http://joinmastodon.org/ns#", "votersCount": "toot:votersCount" } ], "id": "https://historians.social/users/daeres/statuses/110663816935439875", "type": "Note", "summary": null, "inReplyTo": "https://historians.social/users/daeres/statuses/110663783960526458", "published": "2023-07-05T22:23:59Z", "url": "https://historians.social/@daeres/110663816935439875", "attributedTo": "https://historians.social/users/daeres", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://historians.social/users/daeres/followers" ], "sensitive": false, "atomUri": "https://historians.social/users/daeres/statuses/110663816935439875", "inReplyToAtomUri": "https://historians.social/users/daeres/statuses/110663783960526458", "conversation": "tag:historians.social,2023-07-05:objectId=13621451:objectType=Conversation", "content": "<p>It&#39;s just that many of these explorations exist as threads on now ancient forums, or as the descriptions of images posted on gallery-hosting websites, rather than as famous published alternate history.</p><p>It&#39;s a weirdly stark illustration of the gap between the kind of creative authorship shared with small communities and the perception that the only acts of cultural creation that matter must be either marketed or wedged firmly into the public sphere. Ephemera as a description of substance, almost</p>", "contentMap": { "en": "<p>It&#39;s just that many of these explorations exist as threads on now ancient forums, or as the descriptions of images posted on gallery-hosting websites, rather than as famous published alternate history.</p><p>It&#39;s a weirdly stark illustration of the gap between the kind of creative authorship shared with small communities and the perception that the only acts of cultural creation that matter must be either marketed or wedged firmly into the public sphere. Ephemera as a description of substance, almost</p>" }, "attachment": [], "tag": [], "replies": { "id": "https://historians.social/users/daeres/statuses/110663816935439875/replies", "type": "Collection", "first": { "type": "CollectionPage", "next": "https://historians.social/users/daeres/statuses/110663816935439875/replies?min_id=110663840975811826&page=true", "partOf": "https://historians.social/users/daeres/statuses/110663816935439875/replies", "items": [ "https://historians.social/users/daeres/statuses/110663840975811826" ] } }, "likes": { "id": "https://historians.social/users/daeres/statuses/110663816935439875/likes", "type": "Collection", "totalItems": 0 }, "shares": { "id": "https://historians.social/users/daeres/statuses/110663816935439875/shares", "type": "Collection", "totalItems": 0 } }