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", "litepub": "http://litepub.social/ns#", "directMessage": "litepub:directMessage" } ], "id": "https://infosec.exchange/users/0xabad1dea/statuses/111860684509813950", "type": "Note", "summary": null, "inReplyTo": null, "published": "2024-02-02T07:23:09Z", "url": "https://infosec.exchange/@0xabad1dea/111860684509813950", "attributedTo": "https://infosec.exchange/users/0xabad1dea", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://infosec.exchange/users/0xabad1dea/followers" ], "sensitive": false, "atomUri": "https://infosec.exchange/users/0xabad1dea/statuses/111860684509813950", "inReplyToAtomUri": null, "conversation": "tag:infosec.exchange,2024-02-02:objectId=130394554:objectType=Conversation", "content": "<p>A few times I have told the anecdote that the singly most <em>baffling</em> thing I ever saw in a code review — not the most insecure, just the most “how could a real programmer have written this? how could this ever make sense?” thing — was simply a C++ variable “number_of_trucks” … declared as float. Unambiguously referring to real physical trucks in a fleet. </p><p>Reader, it’s been over ten years and I am blowing the gods damn whistle. I had edited that story to protect the guilty: the variable was named number_of_planes. It was shipped by a company whose name begins with “B” and rhymes with “GOING out of business.”</p>", "contentMap": { "en": "<p>A few times I have told the anecdote that the singly most <em>baffling</em> thing I ever saw in a code review — not the most insecure, just the most “how could a real programmer have written this? how could this ever make sense?” thing — was simply a C++ variable “number_of_trucks” … declared as float. Unambiguously referring to real physical trucks in a fleet. </p><p>Reader, it’s been over ten years and I am blowing the gods damn whistle. I had edited that story to protect the guilty: the variable was named number_of_planes. It was shipped by a company whose name begins with “B” and rhymes with “GOING out of business.”</p>" }, "attachment": [], "tag": [], "replies": { "id": "https://infosec.exchange/users/0xabad1dea/statuses/111860684509813950/replies", "type": "Collection", "first": { "type": "CollectionPage", "next": "https://infosec.exchange/users/0xabad1dea/statuses/111860684509813950/replies?min_id=111860848941602567&page=true", "partOf": "https://infosec.exchange/users/0xabad1dea/statuses/111860684509813950/replies", "items": [ "https://infosec.exchange/users/0xabad1dea/statuses/111860848941602567" ] } }, "likes": { "id": "https://infosec.exchange/users/0xabad1dea/statuses/111860684509813950/likes", "type": "Collection", "totalItems": 1769 }, "shares": { "id": "https://infosec.exchange/users/0xabad1dea/statuses/111860684509813950/shares", "type": "Collection", "totalItems": 1111 } }