this post was submitted on 15 Jun 2023
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Programming
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As far as I know, yes. There's probably a filter in the sense that an instance only gets update for relevant events, i.e. you don't get messages for communities you're not subscribed to.
That would essentially be the same concept, just wrapped into each instance. But it would a) put massive loads on these instances and b) need some entity/authority to find the optimal spanning tree in the network - and someone would need to define, what "optimal" means in this context.
I don't think you need an optimal spanning tree. Proxying messages is basically just how Usenet works. You peer with a small number of other servers each party forwards messages in groups the other party is interested in.
As someone who used to run a Usenet server (20 years ago), I don't think it's a better system. The extra hops add a lot of questions related to moderation, filtering, censorship, trust, responsibility for forwarded content, and so on.
That's why you'd need either a very closely to optimal spanning tree - or just direct intermediates (like a hub). Having messages bounce forever in the network would be far from ideal.
In any case, for everything above the actual message-handling layer, the aggregation should be transparent. That is, for moderation/filtering, etc. it shouldn't matter, via which route the messages came to your instance.
Trust isn't that hard either, if you sign messages (I have no idea if that's already the case). Hubs would be no different from an ISP then.
Maybe I wasn't clear enough above, but I would propose a very simple hub design. A hub receives messages that contain an envelope and a payload within the envelope, and then simply copy/repackage a bunch of payloads in new envelopes and send these to the connect message consumers. The actual payloads are not touch at all.