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.
{
"@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",
"Hashtag": "as:Hashtag"
}
],
"id": "https://rhabarberbarbara.bar/users/unagi/statuses/105675624001725422",
"type": "Note",
"summary": null,
"inReplyTo": null,
"published": "2021-02-04T23:40:56Z",
"url": "https://rhabarberbarbara.bar/@unagi/105675624001725422",
"attributedTo": "https://rhabarberbarbara.bar/users/unagi",
"to": [
"https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public"
],
"cc": [
"https://rhabarberbarbara.bar/users/unagi/followers"
],
"sensitive": false,
"atomUri": "https://rhabarberbarbara.bar/users/unagi/statuses/105675624001725422",
"inReplyToAtomUri": null,
"conversation": "tag:rhabarberbarbara.bar,2021-02-04:objectId=13816:objectType=Conversation",
"content": "<p><a href=\"https://rhabarberbarbara.bar/tags/HowEmotionsAreMade\" class=\"mention hashtag\" rel=\"tag\">#<span>HowEmotionsAreMade</span></a> 这本书,虽然很多观点看起来有些反常识,但是真的很符合我的亲身经历!有一种自己的胡乱猜想被科学证实了的感觉。随便摘抄一下:</p><p>“Scientists in Israel found that judges were significantly more likely to deny parole to a prisoner if the hearing was just before lunchtime. The judges experienced their interoceptive sensations not as hunger but as evidence for their parole decision. Immediately after lunch, the judges began granting paroles with their customary frequency.<br>When you experience affect without knowing the cause, you are more likely to treat affect as information about the world, rather than your experience of the world. The psychologist Gerald L. Clore has spent decades performing clever experiments to better understand how people make decisions every day based on gut feelings. This phenomenon is called affective realism, because we experience supposed facts about the world that are created in part by our feelings. For example, people report more happiness and life satisfaction on sunny days, but only when they are not explicitly asked about the weather. When you apply for a job or college or medical school, make sure you interview on a sunny day, because interviewers tend to rate applicants more negatively when it is rainy. And the next time a good friend snaps at you, remember affective realism. Maybe your friend is irritated with you, but perhaps she didn’t sleep well last night, or maybe it’s just lunchtime. The change in her body budget, which she’s experiencing as affect, might not have anything to do with you.”</p><p>“Back when I was in graduate school, a guy in my psychology program asked me out on a date. I didn’t know him very well and was reluctant to go because, honestly, I wasn’t particularly attracted to him, but I had been cooped up too long in the lab that day, so I agreed. As we sat together in a coffee shop, to my surprise, I felt my face flush several times as we spoke. My stomach fluttered and I started having trouble concentrating. Okay, I realized, I was wrong. I am clearly attracted to him. We parted an hour later—after I agreed to go out with him again—and I headed home, intrigued. I walked into my apartment, dropped my keys on the floor, threw up, and spent the next seven days in bed with the flu.”</p>",
"contentMap": {
"en": "<p><a href=\"https://rhabarberbarbara.bar/tags/HowEmotionsAreMade\" class=\"mention hashtag\" rel=\"tag\">#<span>HowEmotionsAreMade</span></a> 这本书,虽然很多观点看起来有些反常识,但是真的很符合我的亲身经历!有一种自己的胡乱猜想被科学证实了的感觉。随便摘抄一下:</p><p>“Scientists in Israel found that judges were significantly more likely to deny parole to a prisoner if the hearing was just before lunchtime. The judges experienced their interoceptive sensations not as hunger but as evidence for their parole decision. Immediately after lunch, the judges began granting paroles with their customary frequency.<br>When you experience affect without knowing the cause, you are more likely to treat affect as information about the world, rather than your experience of the world. The psychologist Gerald L. Clore has spent decades performing clever experiments to better understand how people make decisions every day based on gut feelings. This phenomenon is called affective realism, because we experience supposed facts about the world that are created in part by our feelings. For example, people report more happiness and life satisfaction on sunny days, but only when they are not explicitly asked about the weather. When you apply for a job or college or medical school, make sure you interview on a sunny day, because interviewers tend to rate applicants more negatively when it is rainy. And the next time a good friend snaps at you, remember affective realism. Maybe your friend is irritated with you, but perhaps she didn’t sleep well last night, or maybe it’s just lunchtime. The change in her body budget, which she’s experiencing as affect, might not have anything to do with you.”</p><p>“Back when I was in graduate school, a guy in my psychology program asked me out on a date. I didn’t know him very well and was reluctant to go because, honestly, I wasn’t particularly attracted to him, but I had been cooped up too long in the lab that day, so I agreed. As we sat together in a coffee shop, to my surprise, I felt my face flush several times as we spoke. My stomach fluttered and I started having trouble concentrating. Okay, I realized, I was wrong. I am clearly attracted to him. We parted an hour later—after I agreed to go out with him again—and I headed home, intrigued. I walked into my apartment, dropped my keys on the floor, threw up, and spent the next seven days in bed with the flu.”</p>"
},
"attachment": [],
"tag": [
{
"type": "Hashtag",
"href": "https://rhabarberbarbara.bar/tags/HowEmotionsAreMade",
"name": "#HowEmotionsAreMade"
}
],
"replies": {
"id": "https://rhabarberbarbara.bar/users/unagi/statuses/105675624001725422/replies",
"type": "Collection",
"first": {
"type": "CollectionPage",
"next": "https://rhabarberbarbara.bar/users/unagi/statuses/105675624001725422/replies?only_other_accounts=true&page=true",
"partOf": "https://rhabarberbarbara.bar/users/unagi/statuses/105675624001725422/replies",
"items": []
}
}
}