Know Your Meme (KYM) is a long-established platform that documents and researches internet memes, viral videos, catchphrases, and more. It uses a hybrid model of community wiki-style contributions and professional editorial oversight, making it a rich historical archive of online culture. Originally part of Rocketboom in 2007, KYM was later acquired by Cheezburger Network (2011) and then Literally Media (2016). It’s even recognized by the U.S. Library of Congress.
However, as comprehensive and useful as KYM is, it’s still a centralized platform. That centralization limits control, transparency, and long-term resilience, especially when meme culture itself thrives in decentralized, community-driven spaces.
This got me thinking: has anyone ever considered a decentralized and federated alternative to KYM? Something built on the ActivityPub protocol (like Lemmy, Peertube, Mastodon, etc.), where communities could:
Document and archive memes in a federated, self-hosted way
Vote on or curate meme entries collaboratively
Link meme evolution across different cultural and regional instances
Provide transparency around edits, sourcing, and moderation
Preserve meme culture beyond the control of a single corporate entity
A federated “MemePedia” of sorts could better reflect the chaotic, democratic nature of meme creation and diffusion online.
Unfortunately, I don’t have the technical skill or time to build this myself, but I’d love to discuss the idea, see if anyone else has thought along similar lines, or maybe even hear about any existing initiatives.
What do you think?
Is this something worth attempting?
^