There’s been a lot of talk about Meta’s new twitter clone called Threads because it will federate with other ActivityPub apps. I’ve seen several posts about them possibly using the app as a way to embrace, extend, and extinguish ActivityPub.
Another more immediate concern I have is that Meta will now be able to harvest data from users of other ActivityPub social networks like Lemmy and Mastodon. If Alice on Threads follows Bob on Mastodon for example, that means Bob’s mastodon instance will send information about all of Bob’s posts and everyone who interacts with them to Meta so that Alice can see it.
This is a concern specifically with Meta and other big tech companies running ActivityPub-enabled servers, because their primary motive is to harvest user data to use for advertising. The scariest part to me is that users on networks like Mastodon specifically migrated to Mastodon to get away from big tech, and Meta is still able to harvest their data with Threads.
I don’t care about data harvesting. This stuff’s public.
What I don’t want is my community that I joined to be impacted by a larger community filled with bigots, fascists, the hateful. That’s going to be my cue to exit. So I hope that the community I’m a part of values me and others like me more than tolerating the above for the sake of growth or whathaveyou.
Eh any small instance like these aren’t into the growth at all costs thing because we have to shell out of the costs for hosting more content.
So as long as you don’t join a corpo instance you shouldn’t have that issue hopefully.
This is from the first few hours of Threads, you’re clearly right to be concerned:
and a link, since the embedded images from kbin apparently don’t show on lemmy
🎶 who let the trolls in! (Who, who-who-who)🎶
deleted by creator
I think it would be interesting to explore an API affordance for attaching licenses to fediverse content, with the admins being able to set a default license for their server.
So if Meta wants to get content from the fediverse, it has to check the headers of each post and make sure it’s licensed for commercial use.