• Jeze3D@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Too many of you still have meta accounts, quest headsets, and sympathy for a company that can’t/shouldn’t be trusted with anything. They’re the reason for Trump being elected, the erosion of human rights, and many other atrocities on top of being a privacy nightmare. I don’t want them anywhere near the fediverse.

    • MudMan@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Yeah, I don’t know where you’re from, but over here if you don’t have a Whatsapp account in working order you can’t… do things.

      I hired a company to wire my house and they won’t communicate over anything else. I am in maybe five friends and family groups where every social event in my life is put together. I recently noticed a family member and I didn’t have each other’s numbers anymore, since we only ever communicate over Whatsapp. At work events people will show you a QR code for Facebook or Whatsapp and expect to receive the same back.

      I get that a lot of people, especially in the US, don’t notice, but Meta won this fight like a decade ago. I don’t like it, but that ship sailed as far away as Amazon dominating online shopping.

      • Azure@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        I have had independent contractors offer it as an option, but most still have a phone number or have too many customers who aren’t tech savvy enough to use something like that. There’s really no way a reputable business in my area would survive that way.

        • MudMan@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          I don’t know what your area is, but everybody here is tech savvy enough to use WhatsApp. It’s assumed to be just… part of how phones work. Both my elderly parents use it. My mom is on multiple chatgroups I had nothing to do with setting up. She only reaches out to me for help if she thinks something is spam or phishing. I can’t stress this enough: nobody texts. Text messaging happens over WhatsApp unless you’re receiving TFA notifications or automated messages from companies or the government, kinda like email.

          As for the business, I’m sure if I had requested a phone call they would have called me, but it was a telecom firm and it wasn’t really a big conversation. Guy just went “here’s my WhatsApp, we’ll ping you there” and we understood it to be the way it was gonna go. I’ve had delivery drivers reach out to me over it when they had my number on hand, unprompted.

          • Retronautickz@beehaw.org
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            1 year ago

            Whatsapp is so big here that it’s not just that everyone uses it, you are practically require, forced, to use Whatsapp.

            I hate whatsapp, but they require it at the university if I want to be informed. Doctor appointments are also. via whatsapp.

            • MudMan@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              Hah. During the pandemic the government here would reach out to you for vaccine appointments over Facebook and WhatsApp. I personally know at least a couple of people who dabbled in antivax stuff and wouldn’t pick up the phone but still got their shots after the government reached out that way.

              Not that Meta has anything to do with that, but it was funny to me to see the government embrace the vectors of misinformation to shame people into not being idiots.

          • Azure@beehaw.org
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            1 year ago

            I live near a major city, most people haven’t had to learn anything like that over their existence: we have good cell phone reception over wifi too, perhaps that is it.

            Tech is just not reliable enough for me to have any experience working with anyone who I would take seriously or who would work with anyone like that. I thought you should know your experience isn’t the norm, especially in any place I have been in the USA.

            Almost anyone who approached with Whatapp is seen as poor, fly-by-night, and likely a grift here. “Why not use your phone number if you are trustworthy?” Would be the opinion here.

            • MudMan@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              No, wait, this isn’t a “my area” as “my city” or whatever.

              I mean it works like this country-wide here.

              Nobody in the country can operate without WhatsApp. That’s not a thing. I am not in the US and I’m telling you here WhatsApp is just how sending text messages works. For everybody. Apple or Android.

              • Azure@beehaw.org
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                1 year ago

                I see. I did assume you were from a place that would have had to adjusted to that due to recent infrastructure.

                The US has had telephones since 1800. The culture is not as new.

                • floofloof@lemmy.ca
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                  1 year ago

                  The dominance of WhatsApp in some countries is not because telephones are new to them. I hope this was a joke and not a real American view of how other countries are.

        • noodlejetski@beehaw.org
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          1 year ago

          because it gained popularity back when mobile plans didn’t include free SMS, back in the feature phone era.

          • abhibeckert@beehaw.org
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            1 year ago

            This. The countries where Meta only has “a lot” of marketshare are the ones that were early to make SMS available for free to everyone.

            In countries where they were late to that, Meta controls the market.

        • MudMan@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Meta won. They won social media. Worldwide they’re absolutely huge. Entire countries never got the “Facebook is for old people” memo, and on many Android territories the default messaging app is effectively WhatsApp. And of course there’s Instagram. That one’s worldwide.

          The only thing I’ve seen threaten Meta’s dominance in this space recently is TikTok. Twitter is a footnote, mostly a residual self-sustaining place for politicians and journalists to talk to each other.

      • liminis@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        Don’t know where you live, but my experience of NL is that everyone and their dog did things via WhatsApp. Even government services, would absolutely struggle to abandon all things Meta-related entirely while living there.

      • floofloof@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        It’s like that in some European countries but in the USA and Canada WhatsApp has far less presence. I understand the pressure though: whenever my family and friends in Europe want to communicate they always suggest WhatsApp.

        • MudMan@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Same. I never got rid of my Facebook account, though. I still have multiple work relations that will reach out to me that way, and my work phone is the one I have logged in to it. I keep it off my home browsers and personal phone.

          But you can’t NOT have WhatsApp. It’s just not an option. If people thought it was hard to get Americans to stop using Twitter, this is an order of magnitude bigger.

          • Chetzemoka@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            Yeah, I’m in the “have to have WhatsApp” camp because it’s the only way I can stay in touch with a bunch of international friends now that I don’t have a Facebook account anymore.

            There are alternatives, but I don’t press about it because at least Meta doesn’t monetize WhatsApp…for now

          • HughJanus@lemmy.ml
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            1 year ago

            If someone sends me a FB message I’ll usually wait a week or so and then tell them to text/email me for faster response.

            Some people, though, already have my phone and email but will send me IG messages, even though I never reply to a single one and ask them (elsewhere) to stop messaging me on there. Several years later they still send me messages.

    • PelicanPersuader@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      My friends refuse to use anything else for our group chats so I’m stuck with it if I want to keep in touch. I don’t use it much outside of that. 🤷

  • dark_stang@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Every time a big company gets into an open source space, they try to take it over. Hopefully everybody in the fediverse recognizes that.

    • Gaywallet (they/it)@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      It kind of doesn’t matter whether everyone in the fediverse recognizes it or not. People around here often forget that they are in the vast minority when it comes to tech literacy in the world. Most people are not interested in the experience that lemmy currently offers, because it’s far too complicated and people asking simple questions are often met with scoff and scorn, because the question has been asked before and they should have just searched for an answer or because it’s so simple, obviously it’s just <insert complicated technical explanation here>.

      The fact that none of this is approachable to a tech naive person is precisely why microsoft killed OSS in the late 90s, why google killed XMPP, and why it’s extremely likely a place like meta or another company might succeed in effectively killing off a platform like activitypub (altho I don’t think it’ll kill it entirely, I do suspect that they will slowly kill it by bleeding users over to their platforms). You see, what these large brands have is recognition - people who are not tech literate still know what google is, what facebook is (they may not know they’ve rebranded to meta), and what microsoft is. These companies have the resources to throw actual designers at this space and provide a front end interface that is friendly to just about anyone. Combine good UX design with a company that people recognize and a huge platform from which to advertise to users (imagine logging into facebook and being presented with all the cool new things you can do on the fediverse) and you’ll get normal people trickling into the platform.

      Here’s where things succeed - these platforms will start as open, and so all the normal people will now be able to talk with their tech friends who are also in the fediverse, and slowly these platforms will become monoliths. They’ll start curating the experience more as user reports roll in, and as they tighten the reigns. Over time you’ll find that you can’t reach these users unless you’re also on their platform, and your non-tech literate friends will ask you to migrate to their platform so you can continue to interact through the same channels that they’ve been interacting with you. While you may be unwilling to migrate, some people will be, and slowly but surely the platforms will dominate the space. They might be sunset eventually as a way to kill off the protocol, or they might just simply turn into their own walled garden.

      The only way forward I can see which is resistant to attacks of capital of this nature are when an open source protocol actually starts to center design during the development of the platform. You can’t just tack a user design expert onto a platform like lemmy and ask them to make things make sense, because federation itself needs a whole new set of terminology, designed by people who understand how non-tech literate people think, and a whole new backend to support a front end that’s truly user friendly. But user design is not friendly to github and most developers aren’t designers, so this isn’t something I see being accomplished anytime soon. The best that can happen right now is for better platforms to be designed for front-end and UX designers (something akin to github but useful to designers), to work on implementing these kinds of people from the beginning, and for open source projects to start reaching out more to designers, to start spending donated money on designers, and to center design as an important principle to OSS protocols.

      • SkyNTP@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        A discussion around tech is a distraction, and it’s a fallacy to think people are too illiterate to understand the problem. The problem is one of incentives, politics, and economic policies. The problem is that people have forgotten that a free market only serves the interests of paying customers. But users of online platforms are not paying customers. They are slaves to a system that will treat them like dirt because they get addicted to it.

        It’s going to take a cultural revolution for people to learn this, not so different than it took generations to learn about the dangers of mercury/asbestos/cigarettes/climate change/plastic pollution. You are right that the change doesn’t happen with discussions around FOSS/fediverse/UX. It starts with a realization of the dangers.

      • abhibeckert@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        There’s nothing wrong with Lemmy’s user interface design.

        It has bugs, for sure, but if you just go to an instance, sign up, and browser the fediverse within that instance it’s a great experience.

        • Gaywallet (they/it)@beehaw.org
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          1 year ago

          You may find nothing wrong with the user interface, but I’m not you and I see plenty wrong with it. I’m not the only one with this opinion, as evidenced by a number of github bug requests, a near constant stream of questions in support communities on these websites, all of the votes my comment is receiving, and well, just asking like 10 random people what they think. I would encourage you to try to put yourself in other people’s shoes - if you’re struggling with that, simply ask them how they feel and listen to what they have to say.

          • abhibeckert@beehaw.org
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            1 year ago

            Oh it’s absolutely full of UX bugs, for sure. But those are all clearly just bugs, they’re not a design problem.

            • bric@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              From a design perspective it still has a lot of friction on signups though, we’re asking users to make a server choice before they even remotely understand what that entails. That simple decision made me spend a week understanding the fediverse before settling on Lemm.ee, but the average user won’t do that, they’ll get confused and then leave.

              From a more traditional UX standpoint the general feed is also fairly bad, reddit has built in feeds for the things people care the most about (trending and subscribed) that pop up by default when opening the app or website, and gives the advanced controls off to the side. Lemmy on the other hand defaults to a feed that shows basically nothing, and only gives the advanced controls to fix it. For a new user that isn’t tech savvy, the fact that the feed defaults to local is enough to make Lemmy seem completely dead if they happened to join a small instance.

              These aren’t major issues for us, but they are major issues for widespread adoption. It needs to be so easy that you can use it accidentally, and the UX isn’t there yet. I’m sure we can fix issues with the feed and the app, but I do worry that the server choice problem isn’t going to get a good solution

        • alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgM
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          1 year ago

          There’s nothing wrong with Lemmy’s user interface design.

          as a not-tech-savvy (relative to other users here, anyways) person: i have absolutely no idea how you can say this with confidence. Lemmy’s UI and UX is probably still on the worse end of FOSS projects i’ve used and i’ve had a year and a half to get used to it. i still have to double back to find certain settings that i use literally every day in moderating the site! i hang with it because i know the developers are slammed, but this would not fly with even most of my friends, much less my mom or someone who has extremely low computer literacy and mostly learns by repetition.

    • Dee@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      Looks at article.

      Yeah, I think they might realize it lol

      Happy to see it though, I’ve been saying they should be defederated right out of the gate ever since I first saw these rumors.

    • MudMan@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      So hold on, is this an open source space, a protocol or “like email”? Which of the poor analogies people use to convey excitiement about AcitivityPub are supposed to apply here?

      Because, you know, Google got into the Linux space, into email and into open source software and it seems those survived the experience.

      • jalda@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        [Google got] into open source software and it seems those survived the experience

        Not really. Google is responsible for the open source browser Chromium, which is the base for Google Chrome, Edge, Brave, Opera, Vivaldi, etc. They dominate the browser market, and they use their position to implement features outside the web standard. Their competitors (mainly Firefox) are not able to implement the non-standard features, driving them out of the market. Classic Embrace-Extend-Extinguish.

        Google got into the Linux space

        Technically, both Android and Chromebok are Linux-based. But Google has done everything possible so that they aren’t part of the “Linux space”, to the point that Android uses a fork of version 3.x of the Linux kernel (regular Linux is now at version 6.x).

        • abhibeckert@beehaw.org
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          Google is responsible for the open source browser Chromium

          Pretty sure that was Apple, not Google. Google joined the WebKit party later. By the time Google forked WebKit the other rendering engines (used by the FireFox and old versions of IE) were pretty much gone.

          Also, Now that Google has forked WebKit, we’re back to two competing engines. And at least on the websites I run our traffic is about 45% each (and 10% other). That’s actually more healthy than it used to be (95% IE).

          Private companies embracing open source browsers fixed a broken platform, it didn’t embrace/extend/extinguish.

          Yes, FireFox is struggling for marketshare. Personally I think their biggest problem is they have a legacy code base that dates back to Netscape. It’s got nothing to do with Google.

        • MudMan@kbin.social
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          Right. But you do notice how any of those scenarios fail to “extinguish” anything, right? I’m typing this on Firefox, which is still going strong and has negligible incompatibilities. Chromium didn’t eradicate the competition by embracing open source, it did so by succeeding with their commercial product. The ONE competitor it didn’t outright replace with its open source alternative is Firefox, in fact.

          And in the other scenario Android simply forks and separates. Linux is clearly not threatened by Android or ChromeOS, and all of those remain viable, healthy alternatives to closed, paid competitors from Microsoft and Apple.

          Can’t have your cake and eat it, too. Either the open source environment based on Firefox and Linux is thriving or it’s been dismantled by malicious adoption from commercial enterprises. Which is it?

      • dark_stang@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        Google is actually a great parallel here, because of what they did to XMPP (the federated chat protocol). They implemented it for hangouts/gchat. It was a good on-ramp that allowed people to talk across platforms. Then Google created a bunch of features that only worked internally and not with XMPP. Then they removed XMPP.

        • abhibeckert@beehaw.org
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          XMPP didn’t work on mobile. You had to have the app running to receive messages, and the battery wasn’t large enough to keep the CPU powered up all day.

          • dark_stang@beehaw.org
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            1 year ago

            Somebody not being able to message me while I’m offline is a fantastic feature that I wish we still had. I miss that.

      • baduhai@sopuli.xyz
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        1 year ago

        It’s debatable whether email survived. But yes, I do believe this problem is being blown out of proportion, it was inevitable that large companies would get into ActivityPub.

      • sznio@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        Google got into the Linux space, into email and into open source software and it seems those survived the experience.

        Try to start up your own independent email server instead of going with one of the largest providers. You will never be able to message anyone on Gmail.

  • Mika@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I don’t see what there is to gain from this, I don’t want mega-corporation in my social media anymore. especially not after what has been happening to their platforms. if their users want to join the fediverse, the account creation process is always open as long as they can follow the rules!

    And of course there’s always the fact that their end goal will not be good for any of us, no matter what it is there is a 0% chance our interests align

    • MudMan@kbin.social
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      I mean, all the people I know being here, for one. That’d be a bit of a win.

      Doesn’t mean I’d have to listen to what they’re saying, but it’d be nice if being on a “fediverse” platform didn’t mean forcibly cutting off from them.

  • Thalestr@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Good! Meta has proven time and time again that them and their services are not to be trusted. Deplatforming that trashfire before it even starts is a smart move.

    • MudMan@kbin.social
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      I’m going to assume you misspoke there, but the notion of fediverse instances “deplatforming” Meta is… quite the notion.

      Defederating from Meta is not so much “deplatforming” them, as refusing to be in their platform.

      • Thalestr@beehaw.org
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        Maybe not the right word to use, but the fediverse coming together in agreement to not federate with “Threads” takes away a lot of the benefit Meta gets from creating a federated service in the first place. It’s basically pulling the rug out from under Meta before they’ve even taken a first step on it. It’s a smart move and I support it 100%

        • MudMan@kbin.social
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          No it doesn’t, because the only benefit Meta gets from creating a federated service is to have the same back of the box feature as BlueSky.

          Like, there is literally no other advantage for them. The paranoid assumption that this is a ploy to remove competition is ludicrous. Nothing about ActivityPub competes in any meaningful way with Meta. If I had to bet, the entire concept is fully a PR move.

  • takeda@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Yes, please. We can’t expect anything good coming from them.

    Last time we were burned (or at least I am aware of) was with Jabber and Google Talk.

    It helped them bootstrap their instant messaging, and once everyone was using it they simply blocked access.

    It is pretty much guaranteed that Facebook will do the same thing.

  • AuroraRose@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Okay, someone explain to me cus i apparently don’t have the critical thinking skills to figure it out on my own.

    What does Meta want from joining the fediverse? What is the draw for them???

    • TheTrueLinuxDev@beehaw.org
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      They were bleeding users so they want some ways to tap into existing user pool and they think it is easy to get that by simply federating, but they are about to find out the hard way why it won’t go the way they want.

      • MudMan@kbin.social
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        Meta apps have a couple billion users. The fediverse has maybe ten million.

        I really don’t think that’s the reason they’re considering ActivityPub.

          • MudMan@kbin.social
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            Why would you assume that? I think Facebook has reported a loss of users maybe one quarter, ever? They’re flirting with 3bn these days, as far as I can tell.

              • MudMan@kbin.social
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                Well, like we’ve said elsewhere in this, they are orders of magnitude larger than the fediverse. Absorbing users or data is almost certainly not their motivation here.

                • TheTrueLinuxDev@beehaw.org
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                  It seems like a big commitment to federate, so one have to ask what really their motivation. I don’t see anything else than just tapping into user pool and trying to ride the wave. Do you have other ideas?

    • Comet_Tracer@kbin.social
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      I’d imagine they see a new platform/user base they can dump a ton of money into and slowly take for themselves. At very least, another well of user data. If their app was significantly better than the smaller dev’s, would you mind if there was an ad or two?

      I am hoping we keep their grubby hands off, so there is no chance of them destroying this growing platform.

      • AuroraRose@beehaw.org
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        Honestly i would never use another meta product, idc how nice their app would be. i like my funky jerboa app and that’s that! Lol. But - i get your point. A lot of users prefer usability over privacy.

        • Snapz@beehaw.org
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          …usability over privacy.

          ^ The eternal struggle that most likely leads to our eventual downfall as a society.

  • altz3r0@beehaw.org
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    I think the plan should be bracing for impact, and how to deal with the after-effect. Because let’s be honest, we are in a late stage capitalism, and Meta megacorp will get what it wants.

    I don’t currently see it spilling it’s poison to Lemmy/kbin. I’m hopeful rather, but I may be misunderstanding how the fediverse works.

    But for mastodon, I would say the outcome is a segregation, as it’s safe to assume that communities that integrate wirh Meta will be consumed. Unfortunately that likely means starting from scratch, with a even nichier community, as far as I can see. Not exactly from nothing, but content loss will be inevitable, which is the Fediverse greatest weakness imho.

  • PenguinJuice@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Bro fuuuuuuck that company. That company is the definition of evil. As if dividing our country and selling off all our private data wasn’t bad enough for them.

  • unfnknblvbl@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    How weird would it be if all those “I do not give Facebook permission to blah blah rights blah” posts/statements actually did have legal weight in the Fediverse?

  • ericflo@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Am I living in a different planet from the rest of the commenters here? We have much more to gain from this than they do.

    • ccunix@lemmy.ml
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      Not really no.

      The process of “embrace, extend and extinguish” has been used multiple times to destroy FLOSS projects from the inside.

      Of the top of my head:

      • Kerberos
      • Office formats
      • XMPP

      I’ve just got back from a run so my brain is not fully connected, so others can give other examples.

      Meta do not want to join the party for fun. They want to join because it is the only way they can smother it.

    • mycelium_underground@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      A naive planet. Google embrace, extend, extinguish. For profit companies do not want a free community taking away from their ad revenue and they see that the fediverse is something that could take users away from their platforms.

      If you trust meta, I’m sorry but your an idiot.

  • Mindless_Enigma@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    It’ll be interesting to see what happens with this in the long run. I think the fediverse see’s Meta’s EEE play coming from a mile away compared to previous examples of big corps killing a standard. If Meta really does fork ActivityPub, I could see two webs of federation existing side by side. Enough of the fediverse is against Meta’s integration that Meta breaking the ActivityPub standard won’t force everyone to follow along. If enough instances stick to spec, then there’s still a fediverse to interact with on spec. Some will if they think the large user base Meta brings is worth it, but not all.

  • mathemachristian[he]@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Why doesn’t the article write about the actual threat to the fediverse? Embrace extend extinguish is such a common tactic it’s hard to imagine this isn’t what Facebook is doing.