fzaninotto 5 months ago

This is nice, but I wonder about the actual use cases of such a service, given the very loose permissions:

1. Anyone can subscribe to a channel 2. Any registered user can publish to a channel 3. Only registered users can publish to their personal channel (@username)

The second point in particular is problematic. I don't want to add notifications to my app, only to have a script kiddie use is to spam my users.

  • throwaway_352 5 months ago

    The second point is solved with the 3rd point I think. In your case you need to create a user channel

    From the FAQ:

    > Ahey.io has two types of channels:

    > Regular channels: Any authenticated user can publish to these channels.

    > User channels: These channels are in the format @username, and only the user who created the user account can publish to it.

edoceo 5 months ago

This is cool. There was an old post here about one called patchbay (IIRC) then I made one called httpubsub (go, quick and dirty).

I'm using one called ntfy.sh now; it's good; has all the use-case & app and stuff. Self hostable FTW.

  • mazambazz 5 months ago

    Ntfy is phenomenal. I love having my own compiled app for the background notifications on a self-hosted instance. It's so easy to hook any update or alerts I want into and get it delivered to any of my devices.

    Also, a really nifty cross-platform clipboard.

programmarchy 5 months ago

I’m not super familiar with browser notifications, but I want to use them in my next project. Does this library make it easy to add push notifications to my web app similar to airship for mobile app push notifications?

Tistron 5 months ago

I just use a telegram bot that my scripts use to send me notifications that I receive in a few different channels, depending on topic.

  • xeonax 5 months ago

    Same here. you also get buttons to interact.

cess11 5 months ago

The resend verification email function in model.js doesn't check the input against database and can probably be used for nefarious purposes.

fitsumbelay 5 months ago

agreed that this is a cool project, am a bit (just a wee bit) bummed about the express dependency.

I've never used the Push API but look forward to it, and I appreciate this post for putting this tech back on my radar. I can envision a lot of cool self-hosted projects based on it

ShaggyHotDog 5 months ago

I haven't tried web notifications yet, good reason to try now.

ANaimi 5 months ago

Such a clean codebase and style! great job

Gotperl 5 months ago

I was disappointed when I found this isn't a service that delivers Publix Subs.

  • easton 5 months ago

    I’ll fund a startup that uses web push to tell me when chicken tender subs are on sale, though.