@mrkrndvs I’m curious if you manually cut & paste your replies for others’ sites (who may not support webmention or even pingback/trackback) into their old-school comments sections?
I often worry that without that, or without replying to versions on Twitter if they syndicated, they won’t see my response via pingback/trackback or other means. Instead my reply sits all alone on my site and they don’t have the benefit of seeing it at all unless they come across it organically otherwise.
Generally when I manually cut and paste replies, I’ll often use the comment’s “website” field to include the permalink for my comment and then I’ll take the permalink for my comment and add it to my syndication links since I’ve manually syndicated it.
Sometimes I notice that including multiple links in a reply can also run afoul of spam filters.
One of my favorite set of machinations occurred recently when I wrote this reply to Jon Udell: http://boffosocko.com/2018/01/07/reply-to-annotating-web-audio-by-jon-udell/
Jon came back to his original post and appended his own comment to document my comment in the most circuitous of manners which included using his annotation tool Hypothes.is: https://blog.jonudell.net/2018/01/06/annotating-web-audio/#comment-474656
Interestingly we both used WordPress, Hypothes.is, and Twitter to carry on the conversation. I was quite impressed that he took the time to circle back around and document my end of the conversation since he must have missed my pingback (he doesn’t have webmentions) and my manual cut & paste, but did manage to see the notification on Twitter.
It all just goes to show that you’ve got to keep your eye on the tech that you and everyone else is using until it’s broadly and evenly distributed. One day perhaps…

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