identity-elsewhere

IndieWeb sites often have a section on their home page that lists links to profile pages on social network silos and other forms of  identity elsewhere .

IndieWeb Community
See: indieweb-elsewhere

Tantek
undefined has a sidebar section on tantek.com with headings "Follow" and "Elsewhere" and use of rel="me" to link to silo profiles that can be followed (including an at-at username), and others that represent content and contributions elsewhere:
 * https://tantek.com/#follow
 * https://tantek.com/#elsewhere

Marty McGuire
has a header section on martymcgui.re labeled "Elsewhere on the web" with rel-me icon links to silo profiles

gRegor Morrill
2023-01-01: I moved this to a section of a new page, How to Follow Me:
 * https://gregorlove.com/follow/#elsewhere

Previously: I've had different iterations of this on my contact page over the years, but it was just my Nintendo Switch friend code (text, no URL) from 2020 through 2023-01-01. I probably intended to add more links there but got distracted.
 * Archived example

Jason Garber
has an Elsewhere section near the bottom of his homepage https://sixtwothree.org in a grid of rectangular links four columns wide that responsively shrinks the numbers of columns as you narrow the window

Caleb Hearth
has a Linktree page at /links that could be considered an Elsewhere page though it also contains links to the same domain. The page is an h-card with most links marked up as rel-me and u-url. It also links to an RSS feed with rel-home and rel-alternate, a link to an SSH key page with rel-key, and links to a few pages that are not considered rel-me such as a conference he organized and a Humans.txt page.

In terms of appearance, there is a list of large button links with text for links he perceives to be "more important" followed by a horizontal row of icon links to social network profile pages (there are some duplicates).

Ana Rodrigues
has a Elsewhere section in the footer of her website linking to profiles and using rel="me".

NPR

 * https://twitter.com/brianstelter/status/1644114036185874433?s=46&t=p1u_JcTcHVYZivndrfI98g
 * "NPR hasn't tweeted since Musk's unjust labeling decision, and its bio now directs visitors elsewhere: "You can find us every other place you read the news."" @brianstelter April 6, 2023