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", "type": "OrderedCollectionPage", "orderedItems": [ { "type": "Create", "actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1625815829608140809", "object": { "type": "Note", "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1625815829608140809/entities/urn:activity:1693373345413730311", "attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1625815829608140809", "content": "“Last month Sam Altman wrote a fanciful blog post which has stirred discussion within the tech industry. He titled it The Intelligence Age. <br /><br /><a href=\"https://open.substack.com/pub/darkfutura/p/the-road-to-ai-utopia-paved-with\" target=\"_blank\">https://open.substack.com/pub/darkfutura/p/the-road-to-ai-utopia-paved-with</a><br /><br />The chief thesis which the narcotically optimistic post espouses is the following: <br /><br />In the next couple of decades, we will be able to do things that would have seemed like magic to our grandparents.<br /><br />It’s almost all you need to know to understand the gist behind much of Altman and his cohort’s foundational beliefs, or even ethos, driving their near-pathologically obsessive accelerationism toward AI singularity—or what they conceive as such. <br />It has all the hallmarks of blind Utopianism. The examples of coming achievements he gives seem myopically ratcheted to first order effects, never considering second or third order consequences as should responsibly be the case. Let’s go through some of them before turning the baton onto a broader examination of our potential future under the guidance of this current class of tech thought-leaders. <br /><br />It won’t happen all at once, but we’ll soon be able to work with AI that helps us accomplish much more than we ever could without AI; eventually we can each have a personal AI team, full of virtual experts in different areas, working together to create almost anything we can imagine. Our children will have virtual tutors who can provide personalized instruction in any subject, in any language, and at whatever pace they need. <br /><br />JPMORGAN HAS ADDED 1,000 ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE WORKERS<br /><br />Translation: JPMorgan has fired 1,000 regular workers (human workers) <br /><br />Firstly, why would our jobs be valued and our salary levels maintained once employers figure out that most or even a significant amount of the job is being performed or enhanced in some way by this ‘assistant’? It sounds like a recipe for more labor rights abuses and another ‘era’ of minimal to no salary growth. <br />Second, he states AI ‘tutors’ will train your children. What would AI tutors be training them for, exactly? In a AI-overrun future, jobs may hardly exist except for the chosen few engineers running the AI algorithms. So while AI can ‘train’ you, that training may very well be worthless. There is a distinct disconnect between economic cause and effect operating here. The promise is essentially that AI will ‘augment’ our jobs and activities—the same ones AI is expected to obsolesce and eliminate. <br /><br />With these new abilities, we can have shared prosperity to a degree that seems unimaginable today; in the future, everyone’s lives can be better than anyone’s life is now. Prosperity alone doesn’t necessarily make people happy – there are plenty of miserable rich people – but it would meaningfully improve the lives of people around the world.<br /><br />And here he goes off again in a religious fervor. AI doing everything for us, taking our jobs, etc., is somehow going to add more meaning to our lives rather than leaving them as empty and broken husks. ‘Prosperity’ is one of those magical words that seems to define itself the more you utter it, without any real contextual backing. The tech-elites fling it around like colored dyes in a Holi frenzy, but they never care to outline its tangible definition. These are just shallow platitudes and blandishments barely a cut above corporate PR copy, all meant to hand-wave us into blind acceptance of sweeping unasked-for societal changes. But even the Segway creator at least attempted to paint a concrete vision, set with specific examples and use cases of how his invention will redefine the future ‘for the better’. These people aren’t even bothering—just accept that “great plentitude” and unimaginable “shared prosperity” will in some obscure way percolate through us all. <br />Again I ask: how could a thing which robs us of meaning with one hand simultaneously give it with the other? History has shown that when you take away a people’s self-sufficiency and ability to create prosperity for themselves, you do not bathe them in limitless ‘prosperity’ but rather enslave them to the owners of the ‘means of production’, to use a triggering Marxist token. <br />In fact, Altman is so in love with the empty phrase he uses it twice: <br /><br />We can say a lot of things about what may happen next, but the main one is that AI is going to get better with scale, and that will lead to meaningful improvements to the lives of people around the world.<br /><br />His second usage is no more supported than the first—its invocation again flung idly forth like shrifts or libations at a gallows stage. <br /><br />AI models will soon serve as autonomous personal assistants who carry out specific tasks on our behalf like coordinating medical care on your behalf. <br />Technology brought us from the Stone Age to the Agricultural Age and then to the Industrial Age. From here, the path to the Intelligence Age is paved with compute, energy, and human will.<br /><br />If we want to put AI into the hands of as many people as possible, we need to drive down the cost of compute and make it abundant (which requires lots of energy and chips). If we don’t build enough infrastructure, AI will be a very limited resource that wars get fought over and that becomes mostly a tool for rich people.<br /><br />But who said society wants AI in their hands en masse? What major social study or wide-ranging series of surveys came upon this conclusion? In fact, he sounds merely as the frontman for the industrialists with their ever-quest for productivity boosts at the expense of wages. And of course, the above paragraph hits at the true intension behind the schmaltzy feel-good facade of this juvenile screed: it’s an underhanded call for funding for Altman’s very own ‘infrastructure’ drive—the very same which will enrich him to the tune of trillions. He wants global governments to subsidize the mass expansion of energy generation and data-centers so his own unregulated outfit can inherit the globe unchallenged.<br /><br />I believe the future is going to be so bright that… a defining characteristic of the Intelligence Age will be massive prosperity.<br /><br />There he goes into euphoric swoons again over a putatively ‘defining characteristic’ he refuses to define—the same old carelessly tossed-off banality of ‘prosperity’. <br /><br />Although it will happen incrementally, astounding triumphs – fixing the climate, establishing a space colony, and the discovery of all of physics – will eventually become commonplace. <br /><br />Not only is this monumentally vain, oozing with eccentric egotism, but it is astoundingly dangerous as well. The midwit little boy playing at God is going to “fix” the climate? He presumes to challenge Nature itself for supremacy as if he alone possesses the very blueprint to natural life? Nature doesn’t need fixing, but we can sure conclude what does after reading this puffed-up, pretentious juvenilia. <br /><br />Lastly: <br /><br />As we have seen with other technologies, there will also be downsides…but most jobs will change more slowly than most people think, and I have no fear that we’ll run out of things to do (even if they don’t look like “real jobs” to us today). <br />Many of the jobs we do today would have looked like trifling wastes of time to people a few hundred years ago, but nobody is looking back at the past, wishing they were a lamplighter. If a lamplighter could see the world today, he would think the prosperity all around him was unimaginable. And if we could fast-forward a hundred years from today, the prosperity all around us would feel just as unimaginable.<br /><br />What staggering presumption from an egghead incapable of seeing the real world past the parterred hedgerows outside his Silicon Valley ivory tower window. Only those operating in the flightiest elite circles could possibly describe today’s historically unequal world as brimming with the shades of prosperity he romanticizes. The gulf between rich and poor has never been wider than today, the middle-class has officially become nonexistent in most Western nations, and, contrary to his tone-deaf comparison, a huge portion of society does infact increasingly view today’s work as unfulfilling, mindless drudgery—particularly amongst the Gen Z cohort. <br />His salient ‘lamplighter’ comment did spawn a fierce retort from Curtis Yarvin as well, which is worth reading: <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><a href=\"https://open.substack.com/pub/darkfutura/p/the-road-to-ai-utopia-paved-with\" target=\"_blank\">https://open.substack.com/pub/darkfutura/p/the-road-to-ai-utopia-paved-with</a>", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1625815829608140809/followers" ], "tag": [], "url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1693373345413730311", "published": "2024-10-16T19:41:06+00:00", "attachment": [ { "type": "Document", "url": "https://cdn.minds.com/fs/v1/thumbnail/1693373194406203409/xlarge/", "mediaType": "image/jpeg", "height": 1466, "width": 885 } ], "source": { "content": "“Last month Sam Altman wrote a fanciful blog post which has stirred discussion within the tech industry. He titled it The Intelligence Age. \n\nhttps://open.substack.com/pub/darkfutura/p/the-road-to-ai-utopia-paved-with\n\nThe chief thesis which the narcotically optimistic post espouses is the following: \n\nIn the next couple of decades, we will be able to do things that would have seemed like magic to our grandparents.\n\nIt’s almost all you need to know to understand the gist behind much of Altman and his cohort’s foundational beliefs, or even ethos, driving their near-pathologically obsessive accelerationism toward AI singularity—or what they conceive as such. \nIt has all the hallmarks of blind Utopianism. The examples of coming achievements he gives seem myopically ratcheted to first order effects, never considering second or third order consequences as should responsibly be the case. Let’s go through some of them before turning the baton onto a broader examination of our potential future under the guidance of this current class of tech thought-leaders. \n\nIt won’t happen all at once, but we’ll soon be able to work with AI that helps us accomplish much more than we ever could without AI; eventually we can each have a personal AI team, full of virtual experts in different areas, working together to create almost anything we can imagine. Our children will have virtual tutors who can provide personalized instruction in any subject, in any language, and at whatever pace they need. \n\nJPMORGAN HAS ADDED 1,000 ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE WORKERS\n\nTranslation: JPMorgan has fired 1,000 regular workers (human workers) \n\nFirstly, why would our jobs be valued and our salary levels maintained once employers figure out that most or even a significant amount of the job is being performed or enhanced in some way by this ‘assistant’? It sounds like a recipe for more labor rights abuses and another ‘era’ of minimal to no salary growth. \nSecond, he states AI ‘tutors’ will train your children. What would AI tutors be training them for, exactly? In a AI-overrun future, jobs may hardly exist except for the chosen few engineers running the AI algorithms. So while AI can ‘train’ you, that training may very well be worthless. There is a distinct disconnect between economic cause and effect operating here. The promise is essentially that AI will ‘augment’ our jobs and activities—the same ones AI is expected to obsolesce and eliminate. \n\nWith these new abilities, we can have shared prosperity to a degree that seems unimaginable today; in the future, everyone’s lives can be better than anyone’s life is now. Prosperity alone doesn’t necessarily make people happy – there are plenty of miserable rich people – but it would meaningfully improve the lives of people around the world.\n\nAnd here he goes off again in a religious fervor. AI doing everything for us, taking our jobs, etc., is somehow going to add more meaning to our lives rather than leaving them as empty and broken husks. ‘Prosperity’ is one of those magical words that seems to define itself the more you utter it, without any real contextual backing. The tech-elites fling it around like colored dyes in a Holi frenzy, but they never care to outline its tangible definition. These are just shallow platitudes and blandishments barely a cut above corporate PR copy, all meant to hand-wave us into blind acceptance of sweeping unasked-for societal changes. But even the Segway creator at least attempted to paint a concrete vision, set with specific examples and use cases of how his invention will redefine the future ‘for the better’. These people aren’t even bothering—just accept that “great plentitude” and unimaginable “shared prosperity” will in some obscure way percolate through us all. \nAgain I ask: how could a thing which robs us of meaning with one hand simultaneously give it with the other? History has shown that when you take away a people’s self-sufficiency and ability to create prosperity for themselves, you do not bathe them in limitless ‘prosperity’ but rather enslave them to the owners of the ‘means of production’, to use a triggering Marxist token. \nIn fact, Altman is so in love with the empty phrase he uses it twice: \n\nWe can say a lot of things about what may happen next, but the main one is that AI is going to get better with scale, and that will lead to meaningful improvements to the lives of people around the world.\n\nHis second usage is no more supported than the first—its invocation again flung idly forth like shrifts or libations at a gallows stage. \n\nAI models will soon serve as autonomous personal assistants who carry out specific tasks on our behalf like coordinating medical care on your behalf. \nTechnology brought us from the Stone Age to the Agricultural Age and then to the Industrial Age. From here, the path to the Intelligence Age is paved with compute, energy, and human will.\n\nIf we want to put AI into the hands of as many people as possible, we need to drive down the cost of compute and make it abundant (which requires lots of energy and chips). If we don’t build enough infrastructure, AI will be a very limited resource that wars get fought over and that becomes mostly a tool for rich people.\n\nBut who said society wants AI in their hands en masse? What major social study or wide-ranging series of surveys came upon this conclusion? In fact, he sounds merely as the frontman for the industrialists with their ever-quest for productivity boosts at the expense of wages. And of course, the above paragraph hits at the true intension behind the schmaltzy feel-good facade of this juvenile screed: it’s an underhanded call for funding for Altman’s very own ‘infrastructure’ drive—the very same which will enrich him to the tune of trillions. He wants global governments to subsidize the mass expansion of energy generation and data-centers so his own unregulated outfit can inherit the globe unchallenged.\n\nI believe the future is going to be so bright that… a defining characteristic of the Intelligence Age will be massive prosperity.\n\nThere he goes into euphoric swoons again over a putatively ‘defining characteristic’ he refuses to define—the same old carelessly tossed-off banality of ‘prosperity’. \n\nAlthough it will happen incrementally, astounding triumphs – fixing the climate, establishing a space colony, and the discovery of all of physics – will eventually become commonplace. \n\nNot only is this monumentally vain, oozing with eccentric egotism, but it is astoundingly dangerous as well. The midwit little boy playing at God is going to “fix” the climate? He presumes to challenge Nature itself for supremacy as if he alone possesses the very blueprint to natural life? Nature doesn’t need fixing, but we can sure conclude what does after reading this puffed-up, pretentious juvenilia. \n\nLastly: \n\nAs we have seen with other technologies, there will also be downsides…but most jobs will change more slowly than most people think, and I have no fear that we’ll run out of things to do (even if they don’t look like “real jobs” to us today). \nMany of the jobs we do today would have looked like trifling wastes of time to people a few hundred years ago, but nobody is looking back at the past, wishing they were a lamplighter. If a lamplighter could see the world today, he would think the prosperity all around him was unimaginable. And if we could fast-forward a hundred years from today, the prosperity all around us would feel just as unimaginable.\n\nWhat staggering presumption from an egghead incapable of seeing the real world past the parterred hedgerows outside his Silicon Valley ivory tower window. Only those operating in the flightiest elite circles could possibly describe today’s historically unequal world as brimming with the shades of prosperity he romanticizes. The gulf between rich and poor has never been wider than today, the middle-class has officially become nonexistent in most Western nations, and, contrary to his tone-deaf comparison, a huge portion of society does infact increasingly view today’s work as unfulfilling, mindless drudgery—particularly amongst the Gen Z cohort. \nHis salient ‘lamplighter’ comment did spawn a fierce retort from Curtis Yarvin as well, which is worth reading: \n\n\n\n\nhttps://open.substack.com/pub/darkfutura/p/the-road-to-ai-utopia-paved-with", "mediaType": "text/plain" } }, "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1625815829608140809/entities/urn:activity:1693373345413730311/activity" }, { "type": "Create", "actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1625815829608140809", "object": { "type": "Note", "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1625815829608140809/entities/urn:activity:1693353200217755657", "attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1625815829608140809", "content": "A nuclear reactor at the notorious Three Mile Island site in Pennsylvania is to be activated for the first time in five years after its owners, Constellation Energy, struck a deal to provide power to Microsoft’s proliferating artificial proliferating intelligence operations. <br />The plant was the location of the most serious nuclear meltdown and radiation leak in US history, in March 1979 when the loss of water coolant through a faulty valve caused the Unit 2 reactor to overheat. More than four decades later, the reactor is still in a decommissioning phase.<br /><br />Constellation closed the adjacent but unconnected Unit 1 reactor in 2019 for economic reasons, but will bring it back to life after signing a 20-year power purchase agreement to supply Microsoft’s energy-hungry data centers, the company announced on Friday.<br /><br />The restart, the first time a nuclear reactor in the US has been recommissioned after closure, will send an additional 835 megawatts of power to the Pennsylvania grid, create 3,400 jobs and contribute at least $16bn to the state’s economy, Constellation said.<br /><br />As part of the agreement, Three Mile Island will also be renamed the Crane Clean Energy Center to recognize Chris Crane, the former chief executive of Constellation’s parent company.<br /><br /><a href=\"https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/sep/20/three-mile-island-nuclear-plant-reopen-microsoft\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/sep/20/three-mile-island-nuclear-plant-reopen-microsoft</a>", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1625815829608140809/followers" ], "tag": [], "url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1693353200217755657", "published": "2024-10-16T18:21:03+00:00", "source": { "content": "A nuclear reactor at the notorious Three Mile Island site in Pennsylvania is to be activated for the first time in five years after its owners, Constellation Energy, struck a deal to provide power to Microsoft’s proliferating artificial proliferating intelligence operations. \nThe plant was the location of the most serious nuclear meltdown and radiation leak in US history, in March 1979 when the loss of water coolant through a faulty valve caused the Unit 2 reactor to overheat. More than four decades later, the reactor is still in a decommissioning phase.\n\nConstellation closed the adjacent but unconnected Unit 1 reactor in 2019 for economic reasons, but will bring it back to life after signing a 20-year power purchase agreement to supply Microsoft’s energy-hungry data centers, the company announced on Friday.\n\nThe restart, the first time a nuclear reactor in the US has been recommissioned after closure, will send an additional 835 megawatts of power to the Pennsylvania grid, create 3,400 jobs and contribute at least $16bn to the state’s economy, Constellation said.\n\nAs part of the agreement, Three Mile Island will also be renamed the Crane Clean Energy Center to recognize Chris Crane, the former chief executive of Constellation’s parent company.\n\nhttps://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/sep/20/three-mile-island-nuclear-plant-reopen-microsoft", "mediaType": "text/plain" } }, "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1625815829608140809/entities/urn:activity:1693353200217755657/activity" }, { "type": "Announce", "actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1625815829608140809", "object": { "type": "Note", "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/459850001720287247/entities/urn:activity:1676569570636206099", "attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/459850001720287247", "content": "<a href=\"https://youtu.be/oeCQZNoevmo?si=KhhNY12SbBrhqXx_\" target=\"_blank\">https://youtu.be/oeCQZNoevmo?si=KhhNY12SbBrhqXx_</a>", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/459850001720287247/followers" ], "tag": [], "url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1676569570636206099", "published": "2024-08-31T10:48:54+00:00", "source": { "content": "https://youtu.be/oeCQZNoevmo?si=KhhNY12SbBrhqXx_", "mediaType": "text/plain" } }, "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1625815829608140809/entities/urn:activity:1692649782759133202/activity", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/459850001720287247", "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1625815829608140809/followers" ] }, { "type": "Announce", "actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1625815829608140809", "object": { "type": "Note", "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/459850001720287247/entities/urn:activity:1676759528135200771", "attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/459850001720287247", "content": "<a href=\"https://youtu.be/ux7NfaAy5H4?si=UG8Xxu2I1u-KjzCK\" target=\"_blank\">https://youtu.be/ux7NfaAy5H4?si=UG8Xxu2I1u-KjzCK</a>", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/459850001720287247/followers" ], "tag": [], "url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1676759528135200771", "published": "2024-08-31T23:23:43+00:00", "source": { "content": "https://youtu.be/ux7NfaAy5H4?si=UG8Xxu2I1u-KjzCK", "mediaType": "text/plain" } }, "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1625815829608140809/entities/urn:activity:1692649753185095700/activity", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/459850001720287247", "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1625815829608140809/followers" ] }, { "type": "Announce", "actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1625815829608140809", "object": { "type": "Note", "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/899580325678555155/entities/urn:activity:1676933871754547212", "attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/899580325678555155", "content": "<a href=\"https://youtu.be/SQWVcm-Ptss?si=ONtOb7uYl6eUhi6Shttps://youtu.be/SQWVcm-Ptss?si=ONtOb7uYl6eUhi6S\" target=\"_blank\">https://youtu.be/SQWVcm-Ptss?si=ONtOb7uYl6eUhi6Shttps://youtu.be/SQWVcm-Ptss?si=ONtOb7uYl6eUhi6S</a>", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/899580325678555155/followers" ], "tag": [], "url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1676933871754547212", "published": "2024-09-01T10:56:30+00:00", "source": { "content": "https://youtu.be/SQWVcm-Ptss?si=ONtOb7uYl6eUhi6Shttps://youtu.be/SQWVcm-Ptss?si=ONtOb7uYl6eUhi6S", "mediaType": "text/plain" } }, "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1625815829608140809/entities/urn:activity:1692649716422021129/activity", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/899580325678555155", "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1625815829608140809/followers" ] }, { "type": "Announce", "actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1625815829608140809", "object": { "type": "Note", "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/459850001720287247/entities/urn:activity:1668991928915464202", "attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/459850001720287247", "content": "I started a substack.<br />I'll be writing on agroecology and integrated farming, systems theory.<br /><a href=\"https://benjaminspockdevries151264.substack.com/p/an-introduction\" target=\"_blank\">https://benjaminspockdevries151264.substack.com/p/an-introduction</a><br />", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/459850001720287247/followers" ], "tag": [], "url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1668991928915464202", "published": "2024-08-10T12:58:03+00:00", "source": { "content": "I started a substack.\nI'll be writing on agroecology and integrated farming, systems theory.\nhttps://benjaminspockdevries151264.substack.com/p/an-introduction\n", "mediaType": "text/plain" } }, "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1625815829608140809/entities/urn:activity:1692649648348467212/activity", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/459850001720287247", "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1625815829608140809/followers" ] }, { "type": "Announce", "actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1625815829608140809", "object": { "type": "Note", "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/459850001720287247/entities/urn:activity:1678212801035767812", "attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/459850001720287247", "content": "What I actually do<br />Probably the most important article I've written<br /><a href=\"https://substack.com/@benjaminspockdevries151264/p-148380071\" target=\"_blank\">https://substack.com/@benjaminspockdevries151264/p-148380071</a>", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/459850001720287247/followers" ], "tag": [], "url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1678212801035767812", "published": "2024-09-04T23:38:30+00:00", "source": { "content": "What I actually do\nProbably the most important article I've written\nhttps://substack.com/@benjaminspockdevries151264/p-148380071", "mediaType": "text/plain" } }, "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1625815829608140809/entities/urn:activity:1692649125830463492/activity", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/459850001720287247", "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1625815829608140809/followers" ] }, { "type": "Announce", "actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1625815829608140809", "object": { "type": "Note", "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/459850001720287247/entities/urn:activity:1688184164571942924", "attributedTo": 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