• 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.

  • katy ✨@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 year ago

    It’s been detailed already and obvious that Meta plans to financially compensate and federate with the largest instances while shutting out smaller ones and instituting a “reputation based” system to federate with them so it’s pretty clear that the goal is to incorporate the largest Mastodon instances and then slowly buy them out while cutting everyone else off.

  • sparky@lemmy.federate.cc@lemmy.federate.cc
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    1 year ago

    Yea I mean, I don’t think anyone could actually believe that Meta is acting in good faith here, or even capable of acting in good faith in general. As much as it’s exciting to think about plugging a billion new users into the Fediverse, it would no doubt be done in a way designed to enrich Meta at our expense.

  • Southrydge Freedom@vlemmy.net
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    1 year ago

    Meta is that annoying little sibling that wants to be a part of everything when nobody wants them around. Except instead of a sibling, it’s more of a disease.

  • 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

  • LordChaos82@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 year ago

    A simple solution would be to ask Meta to opensource Facebook, WhatApp, Instagram and whatever their federated instance would be called code and in return, they can federate with the fediverse. I think that will show their true intentions on how much love they have for the opensource community. Put the ball in their court and if they agree, they will be welcomed to the fediverse as good faith actors.

    Just my 2 cents.

    • tangentism@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      Saw this elsewhere

      oh, here’s some JUICY rumored details about meta’s plans for the fediverse

      tl;dr “Meta will only federate with select larger instances from the beginning. There will be contracts which also provide for financial compensation for the instance owners.”

      can’t entirely verify their validity but it’s still worth posting just in case

    • mobyduck648@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      This is still a ‘frog and the scorpion’ kind of situation I think, Meta is fundamentally predatory and incapable of good faith as a matter of collective psychology and culture. They’re a direct analogue of Big Tobacco and should be as welcome in the Fediverse as a diagnosis of the Ebola virus in my opinion.

    • repurpose8513@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Or they could just build on the fendiverse because the fendiverse was created so people like you and all the other unhappy people can’t gatekeep just because you don’t like them. Can’t have your cake and eat it too.

      • flashgnash@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        The whole idea of it being decentralised is to stop companies like meta coming in and turning it into just another capitalism machine

        Theoretically I’d hope the admins of all the bigger Lemmy instances would refuse to federate with them on account of the fact it would largely collapse the federated network into one big blob of everyone on the same server that is controlled by a corporation that’s demonstrated time and time again not to have consumer rights at heart in the slightest

  • 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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      1 year ago

      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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        1 year ago

        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%

  • 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.

    • 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.

      • Rakn@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1 year ago

        Yeah but these examples are all bigger than Google. The fediverse irrelevant in comparison. Additionally at least Linux doesn’t have such a strong network effect, since it’s not a social network. I mean I’m going to let myself be surprised. But I kinda doubt that anything good will come from it.

        The Meta business side isn’t nice folks that try to do good in general.

      • 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.

        • Very much not true. All I’ve really had to do was create an SPF entry in my DNS and setup DKIM. Once that was done, it was okay.

          The guys I regularly exchange email with have had no issues getting mail from my server.

      • 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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          1 year ago

          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.

  • 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???

      • nix@midwest.social
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        1 year ago

        They’ll make a bespoke federated service, collect all the data of their users (and all the people on other networks their users interact with), make it all shiny and fancy and add a ton of improvements most networks don’t have yet. And if they can reach a critical mass of users, they can track a huge cross section of federated activity, and force networks to play by their rules or lose access to their entire userbase. It’s the same thing google did to email.

        • abhibeckert@beehaw.org
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          1 year ago

          Um, isn’t everything everyone does on the fediverse public? I assume it’s all being tracked already. By search engines as a bare minimum, but anyone else (including Meta) who does any kind of research/etc. And they don’t need to be federated to do it, they can just crawl the network with HTTP.

          As for “forcing networks to play by their rules” I don’t see that happening, and Google hasn’t done it with email. Gmail doesn’t have enough marketshare for that. At best they’ve forced people to make sure they have good outbound spam filtering. That’s not just google, every email provider (including small on premise office mail servers) has that policy.

          I’m not saying we should federate them (personally I’m undecided) but your explanation hasn’t convinced me.

          • teawrecks@sopuli.xyz
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            1 year ago

            Instance owners (can) see way more info about you. A rando scraping public posts can’t tell what device a user is connecting from, what posts they’re looking at and for how long, where to most effectively inject ads, and then correlate all that with gps and sound recordings they collect via their app they’ve convinced people to install.

            The social media part of social media apps has always been the secondary feature. Something like 90% of users lurk anyway, the only way they’re getting data on lurkers is a man-in-the-middle attack.

            Also, Gmail is very strong in the email space. It doesn’t matter whether your server ever sends a single piece of spam, Gmail has a history of throttling mail servers’ ability to send to Gmail accounts.

            • abhibeckert@beehaw.org
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              1 year ago

              Facebook will never know any of that about me, since I won’t ever sign up for their instance.

              • teawrecks@sopuli.xyz
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                1 year ago

                I think most people currently on lemmy would agree, but most people aren’t on lemmy. Like it or not, if Meta started a fediverse instance tomorrow, 90% of the fediverse would end up going through it. They would just make it so easy that most people wouldn’t even know they were in the fediverse (which I still believe is a better world than how it currently is).

                Then your choice isn’t just “do I join a meta instance”, but also “do I interact with users/communities” on a meta-owned instance? The upside will obviously be the amount of content (ex. populated niche communities) available. The downside is that Meta will mine anything and everything they can from you. I do think lemmy is architected in such a way that they won’t have lurking data because your local instance “clones” threads for lurking by local users, so maybe it’s not that big of a deal. DMs would still not be encrypted though, and meta certainly won’t endorse communication over matrix.

        • bionicjoey@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          (and all the people on other networks their users interact with)

          This reminded me of the fact that Meta creates “ghost” profiles for people who they know exist, but who don’t use Facebook

    • TheTrueLinuxDev@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      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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        1 year ago

        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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            1 year ago

            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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                1 year ago

                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.

  • doophy@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Let them! There’s nothing saying other instances have to federate with them. Kind of the beauty of the whole thing, really.

      • Dee@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        That only works if we care about the bells and whistles they add. Nobody here does or else we’d still be on those platforms. That strategy just doesn’t work with a federated network that doesn’t connect to your instance.

        They’ll have their own instance with bells and whistles that nobody connects to and we’ll have our federated network. It’ll be exactly like the current structure but they’ll have an instance instead of a dedicated platform.

        • ManInTheMiddle@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Meta has a monetary interest in divering from the activity hub standard. They will use it to stand out from all other federated instances with cool features you can only use on meta instances.
          New people will join metas instances because they are “clearly better” and it will be difficult to deny. Sure there will be ads, privacy concerns etc. but most people don’t care about that.
          The rest of the federated network will over time lose users to meta because people want to stay connected and that’s difficult to do when two instances don’t share the same features.
          The end result is meta oficially forking activity hub and disconnecting from the rest of the federated network.
          It’s the death of activity hub and what we are trying to build here.

          The only way to prevent it is by preventing meta instances from taking off. The main way to do that is to not allow their instances to benefit from the rest of the federated network and to inform meta users of better alternatives. It’s impossible for a disorganized opensource project to keep up with the features that 1000’s of meta developers are paid to do.

        • HarkMahlberg@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          That only works if we care about the bells and whistles they add.

          Like accessibility features? Moderation tools? Profile migration? It may be different in beehaw.org, but here on kbin.social those are features we’re lacking. To my knowledge, moderation is explicitly undefined by the entire ActivityPub spec.

          Just in case it wasn’t clear, I hate Meta. I hate them with a burning passion. I don’t want to see them burn down the fediverse like they’ve done to online privacy and democracy as a whole. But they’re not something we can afford to scoff at and ignore.

          They won’t be offering bells and whistles we want, they’ll be offering features we need. They’ll run their own troll farms, brigading their way across the fediverse, and say “look at all these trolls! We’re gonna create moderation tools to stop these ne’erdowells! And we’ll integrate them into the spec, and give them to you! For free!”

          We’re all proud to say we wouldn’t fall for such a Trojan horse, but we need to be ready to recognize whatever that Trojan horse looks like.

          • Dee@beehaw.org
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            1 year ago

            Like accessibility features? Moderation tools? Profile migration? It may be different in beehaw.org, but here on kbin.social those are features we’re lacking. To my knowledge, moderation is explicitly undefined by the entire ActivityPub spec.

            Which are already being developed as the r/blind community has migrated to Lemmy and is getting those taken care of or at least getting the ball rolling. I’m sorry Kbin doesn’t have that traction yet, but it too will get there. Again, we’re still in alpha/beta stages of these platforms. These things take time.

            Just in case it wasn’t clear, I hate Meta. I hate them with a burning passion. I don’t want to see them burn down the fediverse like they’ve done to online privacy and democracy as a whole. But they’re not something we can afford to scoff at and ignore.

            It is something we can ignore because it literally can’t happen unless nobody defederates them when they get it going. Which, looking at all the community discussion isn’t going to happen. You can relax.

            They won’t be offering bells and whistles we want, they’ll be offering features we need. They’ll run their own troll farms, brigading their way across the fediverse, and say “look at all these trolls! We’re gonna create moderation tools to stop these ne’erdowells! And we’ll integrate them into the spec, and give them to you! For free!”

            They’re all attached to Meta still, it’s a moot point. Nobody who deliberately moved to decentralized platforms is going to go back to a centralized instance to use tools they haven’t been using all this time, it doesn’t make sense.

            Let them make instances and hundreds of bots on them, we’ll defederate those too. Which is the beauty of the fediverse design, we get to keep control of our communities and keep them safe. Just like beehaw defederated from lemmy.world (temporarily) until moderation tools get more powerful.

  • altz3r0@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    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.

    • arthur@lemmy.zip
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      1 year ago

      Idk, currently there are no corporations in this field. So protect the fediverse make sense and, what’s the usefulness of fediverse protocol for Meta/Facebook if the rest of entire fediverse is blocking it?

      Besides that, quitting without fight only benefits them.

  • nick@campfyre.nickwebster.dev
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    1 year ago

    I think fighting this will be a mistake. Instances ran by the likes of Tumblr and Meta can only bring more people into the fediverse, and when they’re in it will be easier for them to move around.

    The great thing about AcitivityPub is it lets the people who want to be in larger more centralised servers connect to those who don’t fairly seamlessly.

  • elevenant@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 year ago

    Does anyone know what there business model could be here? Technically they could get access to all federated content, just as regular instances do. But legally they don’t own that content nor do they know what country it origi ated in. This sounds like a legal nightmare to me. Would they even be allowed to process content in any form created by EU users under GDPR?