Eh, anyone with their own domain can use it even without hosting anything. It just takes a DNS record. So Taylor Swift can have @taylorswift.com or w/e her official website is and that’s pretty much the exact same situation as claiming domain ownership. Someone else could likely register taylorswift.boats but I think most people would realize something is off there.
That’s so much extra offputting text. She just wants to be @taylorswift
That’s short, it’s concise, it’s easy to remember. It’s branding.
Just try to imagine a newscastor telling some story, and saying at the end:
“For all the latest from taylor swift, you can follow on the fediverse @taylorswift”
Now imagine that, compared to this:
“For all the latest from taylor swift, you can follow on the fediverse @[email protected]”
You can make it so the official handle in operation behind the scenes is @[email protected]
That’s not the issue. The issue is, she would want to control her own name. Meaning I couldn’t make @[email protected]
Yes, it’s easy to spot that being fake TO YOU. You have to remember that 60% of America is literally illiterate. Domains are NOT hard to register, but they are hard to register every single variation of a false domain.
And how many people might fall for that? And sure, you don’t eliminate the problem by making handles exclusive, but it makes it harder to fake, and easier to go after those attempting identity theft.
My point is that she can be @taylorswift.com not @[email protected]. Also, exaggerating the number of illiterate people in the USA doesn’t help your argument. You can already be @FaylorSwift on twitter so I’m still not seeing how this is any more secure than using her actual domain that her fans may be familiar with.
Eh, anyone with their own domain can use it even without hosting anything. It just takes a DNS record. So Taylor Swift can have @taylorswift.com or w/e her official website is and that’s pretty much the exact same situation as claiming domain ownership. Someone else could likely register taylorswift.boats but I think most people would realize something is off there.
My point is, she doesn’t want to be @[email protected]
That’s so much extra offputting text. She just wants to be @taylorswift
That’s short, it’s concise, it’s easy to remember. It’s branding.
Just try to imagine a newscastor telling some story, and saying at the end:
Now imagine that, compared to this:
You can make it so the official handle in operation behind the scenes is @[email protected]
That’s not the issue. The issue is, she would want to control her own name. Meaning I couldn’t make @[email protected]
Yes, it’s easy to spot that being fake TO YOU. You have to remember that 60% of America is literally illiterate. Domains are NOT hard to register, but they are hard to register every single variation of a false domain.
Now I can be @[email protected]
And how many people might fall for that? And sure, you don’t eliminate the problem by making handles exclusive, but it makes it harder to fake, and easier to go after those attempting identity theft.
My point is that she can be @taylorswift.com not @[email protected]. Also, exaggerating the number of illiterate people in the USA doesn’t help your argument. You can already be @FaylorSwift on twitter so I’m still not seeing how this is any more secure than using her actual domain that her fans may be familiar with.
You can use your domain as your handle Bluesky, I’ve never seen it done on ActivityPub. Is it possible?