Original author(s) | Evan Prodromou et al. |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Diogo Cordeiro and GNU social Developers |
Final release | 1.20.9[1]
/ 22 June 2019 |
Preview release | 2.0.0beta0[2]
/ 18 July 2021 |
Repository | |
Written in | PHP |
Operating system | Cross-platform |
Available in | More than 25 languages[3] |
Type | Social networking service |
License | AGPL-3.0-or-later[4] |
Website | gnusocial |
GNU social (and its predecessor StatusNet) is a free and open-source microblogging social networking service that implements the OStatus and ActivityPub standards for interoperability between installations. While offering similar functionality to social networks such as Twitter, GNU social seeks to provide the ability for open and federated communication between different microblogging communities, known as 'instances'. Both enterprises and individuals can install and control their own instances and user data.[5][6]
At its peak in popularity, GNU social had been deployed on hundreds of interconnected instances,[7] however has since fallen into disuse as competing software like Mastodon and Pleroma have taken its position as the dominant federated microblogging services. Later on in its lifespan, the project split into two separate branches, with "v2" being a continuation of the original codebase for maintenance of existing instances, with "v3" being a complete redesign of the project meant to integrate further ActivityPub support and modernization of the user experience and its technological back-end. As of August 15, 2022, there had been no new commits to the v2 branch,[8] with the v3 branch also no longer being actively developed not long after by November 25, 2022,[9] with the project essentially abandoned.
Despite its modern obsolescence and dated design compared to modern platforms, GNU social and StatusNet is regarded to be the origin of the Fediverse network and has had a major influence on the design of more modern decentralized social networks that succeeded it.
...under the terms of the GNU Affero General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.