I want to bring some attention to Slidge XMPP Bridges

Lemongrab@lemmy.one to Selfhosted@lemmy.world – 39 points –
git.sr.ht

It seems like an awesome project that fulfills a lot of the requirements for bridging many popular messaging platforms (like FB messenger, WhatsApp, discord, signal, and more). I wanted to share because I know a lot of us have friends and family who still use antiquated/proprietary communication platforms. Fair warning, I have not tried self hosting it myself yet since my server is kinda of a mess right now. Lmk what y'all think.

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Yes, it's totally fantastic, and I'm not biased at all when I talk about it. xD

Understandable. I have to agree (though I have no experience to back it up)

So... this is like Matrix bridged but for XMPP? Great!

Slidge gateways are puppeteering, meaning you need an account to remote control on the external legacy network, but other than that it usually works quite well for a young project like it is.

Isn't puppeteering, aka self botting, a bannable offense one some of these networks?

https://support.discord.com/hc/en-us/articles/115002192352-Automated-user-accounts-self-bots This article is only half true. Bot accounts do not have full access to all API routes, but you can still be banned for botting regular accounts.

Yes, but that is the only realistic way to do this. In praxis is basically never happens unless you start spamming etc.

Is anyone using it? I've tried hosting a FB Messenger bridge to Matrix before but it would just disconnect constantly and didn't work.

(I'm the maintainer) I do use the messenger bridge and it works for me, without disconnection issues.

Yeah Spectrum does the same thing, been around over a decade!

I looked it up but it doesn't seem to have support for many messengers.

It does support a crazy amount of networks (it uses libpurple which is the lib of pidgin), unfortunately it lacks modern features and even groups don't work that well. I actually started to work on slidge because I was fed up with spectrum2's limitations and realised that spectrum2's maintainer think, like many others, that XMPP is dead...