Check your posts (notes, articles, etc.) are marked up with h-entry:

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We found the following post h-entry on your site:

Name

IndieAuth unterstützt OpenID delegation

Author

Content

IndieAuth.com unterstützt jetzt auch OpenID delegation! Janrain just announced that MyOpenId.com will be shutting down by early 2014. If you currently delegate OpenID on your domain to myopenid.com, you’ll need to find a new OpenID provider.

Published

URL https://notiz.blog/2013/09/16/indieauth-unterstuetzt-openid-delegation/

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<a rel="syndication" class="u-syndication" href="…">…</a>

Categories

  • IndieAuth
  • IndieWeb
  • OpenID
  • RelMeAuth
  • https://news.indieweb.org/de

Your h-entries should have, at minimum, the following properties:

  • e-content — the main content of the post
  • p-name — if your post is an article with a name, use this classname.
  • dt-published — the datetime the post was published at, in ISO8601 format, with a timezone
  • u-url — the canonical URL of the post, especially important on pages listing multiple posts

It’s a common convention for the published datetime to be a link to the post itself, but they can be separate if you want.

There should also be some way to discover the author of the post — either link to your homepage (which should have your h-card on it) from anywhere within the body of the page with rel=author, or optionally embed a p-author h-card in the h-entry.

The web is an expressive medium, and as such there are many other properties which you can add to your posts. Check out the h-entry documentation for a full list.

Want to be able to use h-entry data in your code? Check out the open-source implementations.

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