• @[email protected]
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    2 years ago

    I don’t see the issue. For all those concerned about privacy: you know you are posting in public space? Anyone can scrape the posts however they want. Which is a key aspect of openness btw.

    On the other hand, by leaving Threads in would show other companies the concept of a global community instead of multple closed groups. The companies could save on moderation costs Reddit-Style that way, but open.

        • sour
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          is have all users on one instance

              • @[email protected]
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                82 years ago

                It’s big, and that’s absolutely a threat from an embrace/extend/extinguish perspective. A big node on a decentralized network is still part of a decentralized network unless they start breaking the decentralization.

    • @[email protected]
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      212 years ago

      You need to learn your Internet history. It wasn’t so long ago that we had a diverse, interoperable community of instant messaging platforms based on XMPP, an open, federated protocol. Anybody could host their own XMPP server, and communicate with any other XMPP server. Then in 2006, Google added XMPP support to their Talk app and integrated it into the Gmail web interface. But there were problems:

      First of all, despites collaborating to develop the XMPP standard, Google was doing its own closed implementation that nobody could review. It turns out they were not always respecting the protocol they were developing. They were not implementing everything. This forced XMPP development to be slowed down, to adapt. Nice new features were not implemented or not used in XMPP clients because they were not compatible with Google Talk (avatars took an awful long time to come to XMPP). Federation was sometimes broken: for hours or days, there would not be communications possible between Google and regular XMPP servers. The XMPP community became watchers and debuggers of Google’s servers, posting irregularities and downtime (I did it several times, which is probably what prompted the job offer).

      And because there were far more Google talk users than “true XMPP” users, there was little room for “not caring about Google talk users”. Newcomers discovering XMPP and not being Google talk users themselves had very frustrating experience because most of their contact were Google Talk users. They thought they could communicate easily with them but it was basically a degraded version of what they had while using Google talk itself. A typical XMPP roster was mainly composed of Google Talk users with a few geeks.

      Only a few years later, Google would discontinue Google Talk, migrated all their users to Hangouts, and decimated the XMPP community in an instant. Most of the Google users never noticed, outside of some invalid contacts in their list.

      That’s why everyone distrusts Meta. Even with Threads being a relatively unsuccessful platform by commercial social media standards, its active userbase still dwarfs the entire Fediverse combined. There’s absolutely nothing stopping Meta from running the exact same playbook:

      • Add ActivityPub support, but only partially

      • Add new features to ActivityPub without consulting with the rest of the Fediverse or documenting the extensions, degrading the experience for everyone not using Threads

      • Entice Fediverse users to migrate to Threads–after all, why use Mastodon or Lemmy when 95%+ of ActivityPub traffic originates from Threads?

      • Deprecate ActivityPub support after most of the Fediverse is on Threads, leaving it smaller and more fragmented than if Threads had never federated at all, while forcing everyone who migrated from another Fediverse platform to Threads into an impossible choice between abandoning the vast majority of their contacts or subjecting themselves to Meta’s policies, tracking, and moderation

  • @[email protected]
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    2 years ago

    Hi everyone, I am collecting preemptive pikachu faces for when meta inevitably attempts to screw the fediverse over. Please put them in replies to this comment so we don’t clutter up the rest of the comments.

    • 7heo
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      • 1999, XMPP is born. 👶
      • 2005, Google launches “Talk”, touted as a “great victory for XMPP”, with “large-scale XMPP services”.
      • 2012, Google encourages “Talk” users to switch to “Hangouts”.
      • 2013, Google drops open XMPP interoperability with other servers.
      • 2015, Google begins shutting down “Talk” clients.
      • 2017, previous phase is now complete, XMPP is virtually unheard of.
      • 2022, Google shuts down all XMPP integration. XMPP is, for all intents an purposes, dead. 🪦

      • 2016, Mastodon is born. 👶
      • 2023, Meta launches “Thread”, touted as a great victory for Mastodon. ← You are here.
      • 2030, Meta encourages “Thread” users to switch to “Fabric”.
      • 2031, Meta drops open ActivityPub interoperability with other servers.
      • 2033, Meta begins shutting down “Thread” clients.
      • 2035, previous phase is now complete, Mastoson is virtually unheard of.
      • 2040, Meta shuts down all Mastodon integration. Mastodon is, for all intents an purposes, dead. 🪦

      N.B.: The delays in the timeline were copied over verbatim. Historical conditions have to be taken into account, as the popular adoption of internet began in the late 2000s. So it is likely for the “extinguish” phase of Mastodon to happen much faster. I give it 5 years tops. And by 2030, we will all remember it as we now remember XMPP.

      • @[email protected]
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        2017, previous phase is now complete, XMPP is virtually unheard of.

        So it returned back to a state where it would have been without Google anyway.

        All the Jabber clients and services combined were never even close to rivaling ICQ, AIM, MSN, Skype, or whatever else ruled the IM space back then.

        • 7heo
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          So it returned back to a state where it would have been without Google anyway.

          The state before Google was “up and coming solution for federated chat”

          The state after Google was “impractical solution that does not federate¹ properly, and is hard to set up²”.

          Those are not the same.

          1: because of Google.
          2: because of Google.

          • @[email protected]
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            Users don’t care about federation. For them, there is no such category as “federated chat”. There is only “chat”.

            XMPP never had significant market share among the instant messengers of the time (except maybe as custom solutions for work chat, but not as a consumer service).

            • 7heo
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              12 years ago

              Yeah, of course it would have not ever been a mainstream thing for end users. But Google definitely nipped them in the bud, both by providing a (bogus) drive behind the XMPP development (and so, preventing anyone else from doing so), and also by kickstarting them into relative widespread use instead of letting them grow organically.

              If they had, there is a possibility XMPP would have become a service provided by nerds for their friends and family as soon as 2010, like email, or more recently, nextcloud.

              And it would have been a valid option for corporate solutions. But no, instead, we got slack. Thanks, Google.

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    42 years ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Joining the fediverse — the decentralized world of social media that includes Mastodon, Pixelfed, and other services that all interoperate through ActivityPub — has been on the Threads team’s to-do list since the very beginning.

    Instagram head Adam Mosseri told The Verge in July that he believed decentralizing the platform was key to making it relevant to a new generation of creators.

    Skeptics have long held that Threads would never actually federate, even as Zuckerberg, Mosseri, and others at Meta kept promising they would.

    For the largest and most centralized social service on the web, suddenly throwing open the gates to other platforms seemed like an unlikely pivot.

    This test appears to only cover one small part of a truly federated social network — it doesn’t sound like you’ll be able to post from Mastodon to Threads, for instance, and you can’t move your account between services.

    But the test at least reaffirms Meta’s commitment to ActivityPub and to being part of the broader open social web.


    The original article contains 344 words, the summary contains 166 words. Saved 52%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

    • @[email protected]
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      482 years ago

      I’m constantly reminded of it by instagram when they insert the most unhinged incendiary thread posts on my feed. Quite a way to advertise. “Hey, do you like to be angry and argue with strangers? Come join Threads!”

          • @[email protected]
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            32 years ago

            I just got into photography and wanted to post some stuff to Flickr. Any idea how pixelfed is for that? I really like being able to sort by camera or lens and seeing the exact settings used right under the pic

            • @[email protected]
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              42 years ago

              I’d say Pixelfed is great for photography; unlike Instagram its userbase is actually photography-focused, but unfortunately you cannot count on people to include all details in their posts.

              • @[email protected]
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                32 years ago

                I’ll probably just go for that, if it’s already photography focused that sounds great

                • @[email protected]
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                  42 years ago

                  Good luck! Remember to hashtag your posts generously at first, because there’s no algorithm!

      • @[email protected]
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        102 years ago

        Considering a significant portion of their userbase adores ragebait, it probably works out quite well for them lol

  • @[email protected]
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    362 years ago

    Pretty cool. I keep saying that this is a win for open standards and Meta probably does this to appease EU regulators. It’s no surprise that this happens as Threads launches In Europe.

    • @[email protected]
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      352 years ago

      Yep, can’t wait to be able to personally defederate from them, I hope that option comes soon.

      • Meldrik
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        132 years ago

        I see it as an opportunity to tell people on Threads to leave Threads and use an open platform, such as Mastodon, instead. Then eventually Threads will shut down, because everyone moved :D

        • sour
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          32 years ago

          people don’t join because complicated

        • @[email protected]
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          Won’t they have control over their instance though? I’m sure they’re going to run it like Reddit and shadow ban the shit out of their users and also not let them see certain stuff.

          • Kbin_space_program
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            Far more likely to lean on their infrastructure advantage and add things like image and video hosting on-platform that the Fediverse can’t do now.

            Then once secured, they can defederate from the actual fediverse and take the whole thing private.

      • DaDragon
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        72 years ago

        Why would you want to defederate at all? It’s akin to hiding your head in the sand, except done on a community-wide scale. Just because you can’t see the nazi over there in the bushes doesn’t mean he isn’t squatting there, observing you.

        • sour
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          92 years ago

          is facebook

          why wouldn’t you want to defederate

            • Draconic NEO
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              12 years ago

              They certainly have the choice to migrate. If they don’t want to it’s their problem. Fediverse wasn’t meant to be a wide open connect with anyone anywhere unconditionally network, if you want that go to Nostr (it’s filled with Right wing trolls and crypto/nft bros for that very reason). It’s meant to allow for instances to communicate and share content while still being run independently of one another. That also includes the ability to block other servers.

              • Aatube
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                12 years ago

                Facebook and the like certainly aren’t filled with right wing trolls and the fediverse is a very niche thing. They have the choice, but they might not even know it.

        • @[email protected]
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          52 years ago

          He already is, this is all open? They will include people’s numbers in their “awesome wave of the future” and I don’t want that. The more people ignore them and isolate them, the more they won’t have power over everyone.

          • Aatube
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            32 years ago

            What are “people’s numbers”? What power would they have if we didn’t defederate?

            • @[email protected]
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              82 years ago

              Dude, facebook is evil, we all know that. I have no idea how they plan to take over the fediverse, but they’re planning it. Do you remember when they first announced and then everyone suddenly started calling it the threadiverse? They have plans, hold on to your seat.

              • atocci
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                I’ve been under the impression people started using the term threadiverse to describe the Lemmy/Kbin side of the fediverse because we exist in Reddit style threads and interaction with microblog style fediverse posts is obtuse at best. We’re practically in a separate bubble over here, and that was the cause of the new term.

                Edit: The first time I saw the term used was when FediDB made a page for tracking Lemmy+Kbin users

                Edit 2: Archive.org link to the Threadiverse page from June 15th, half a month before the Threads name leaked.

                • @[email protected]
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                  12 years ago

                  I hadn’t heard it once until threads started up. I didn’t join until the great migration, so maybe earlier people used it, but I had only seen fediverse to describe it.

              • Aatube
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                What is the worse case scenario for me, a person living on kbin? What the heck could they do to ever possibly affect us when we can just pull the plug on them anytime?

                • @[email protected]
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                  by user @[email protected]

                  If there’s one company you should preemptively block, it’s Facebook. They have a track record of destroying anything and everything they touch and there is zero reason to think it won’t be the same this time. From this post:

                  They aren’t some new, bright-eyed group with no track record. They’re a borderline Machiavellian megacorporation with a long and continuing history of extremely hostile actions:

                  • Helping enhance genocides in countries
                  • Openly and willingly taking part in political manipulation (see Cambridge Analytica)
                  • Actively have campaigned against net neutrality and attempted to make “facebook” most of the internet for members of countries with weaker internet infra - directly contributing to their amplification of genocide (see the genocide link for info)
                  • Using their users as non-consenting subjects to psychological experiments.
                  • Absolutely ludicrous invasions of privacy - even if they aren’t able to do this directly to the Fediverse, it illustrates their attitude.
                  • Even now, they’re on-record of attempting to get instance admins to do backdoor discussions and sign NDAs.

                  source

          • atocci
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            52 years ago

            I might be looking at this wrong, so please let me know why if I am, but I don’t understand the argument that Google killed XMPP. The protocol existed before Google and still existed after Google. I assume the number of people using the XMPP protocol before Google implemented it was small. Then for a little while, Google added all of their users into the network who could now message all the “pure” XMPP users who were already there. After that though, when Google left the protocol and took all its users that weren’t using XMPP before then anyway, how did that kill it? Would you not still have the same group of XMPP users who were there before Google? Anyone you could chat with before you could still chat with now.

            • TrumpetX
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              12 years ago

              XMPP was very popular. Google joined it, and with it, the power to give it’s users on Gmail access to all the other chat products that all had more chat users by sharing the same XMPP space. Users were very happy to use the superior Gmail product and also let go of their old chat tools because they could still talk to everyone just fine!

              Google waited until they had most of the users and simply started making non compatible changes to their chat until they finally defederated themselves and suddenly their users could no longer chat with anyone who wasn’t also on Google.

              People noticed, but most of the users were no longer willing to drop their now-familiar gchat client because they were now used to it. Users like me who wanted to use Pidgin still were suddenly unable to chat with 80% of their friends unless they gave in and opened up gchat too.

              If Google never federated with the system, we might still likely have aim, msn, etc still around focusing on their chat users. But Google did their thing, stole the market and we’re where we’re at now. Ironically, most people I know now disable Google chat because Google has tried really hard to ruin something that was just fine. But no one is installing Pidgin again and have mostly moved to Discord and Slack (at least in my circles).

        • Spaghetti_Hitchens
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          Obviously we will have to see what sort of content comes in from Threads, but knowing Meta, they will be serving a lot of ads in it. So instances will effectively be distributing Meta ads for free. Well free for Meta; the instances will incur additional costs.

    • sverit
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      52 years ago

      Pretty cool at first glance. Not so cool when they have pulled in enough users and then remove the federation.

        • @[email protected]
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          12 years ago

          Part of that is only because any and all Instagram accounts are also considered Threads accounts. I have a feeling active users is probably in a similar ballpark

          • @[email protected]
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            12 years ago

            BS. There are 140 mil Threads accounts and over 2 bil Instagram accounts. You can create Threads account with Instagram and for a time they couldn’t be decouple but that changed too.

    • atocci
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      52 years ago

      I’m looking forward to federation. My stance on it is that I don’t want to use Threads, but I want to follow and interact with the people who do. Best of both worlds like this.

    • ryan
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      132 years ago

      Agreed. Instances always have the option to defederate with Threads should it prove spammy or ad-filled or socially awful, but I’m cautiously optimistic that Threads will pave the way for a more open social media paradigm in general. Decentralization is a core tenet of Web3, and everyone started focusing on the block chain and Bitcoins and whatnot but there’s so much more to decentralization than that.

      • @[email protected]
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        102 years ago

        Why in the world are you cautiously optimistic? What would give you the idea that meta would do anything but what’s in their shareholder’s interest. My biggest question is, do we know if activitypub is secure enough to keep them out of its software?

        • @[email protected]
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          I don’t think it’s fair to preemptively assume meta is going to be evil here, where is the evidence?

          If a bear was charging you that you had just watched murder a bunch of people would you just assume it was going to attack you? What evidence would you have for that?

          Personally, I think large tech corporations have a wonderful track record with treating the public commons as a shared resource to nurture and maintain not a coal vein in the ground to ruthlessly extract :)

      • @[email protected]
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        72 years ago

        Though this is more federation with a wheel and spoke model than true decentralization where each pier communicates with other piers directly. Each have their place for sure, but they cannot be interchanged because they are not the same thing.

  • @[email protected]
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    132 years ago

    Honestly I think this is good for the fediverse.

    It instantly boosts mastodon and Pixelfed’s reach, which means people won’t dismiss posting there as it never gets seen.

    I would never open a Threads account, but it unlocks seeing content from a lot of people I like who ditched Twitter but didn’t understand mastodon.

    Yes, this can also be Embrace, Extend Extinguish, but I’m happy for the publicity.

    If people don’t like it they can join an instance that defederatrs from Meta and that’s totally fine.

    • GhostalmediaOP
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      192 years ago

      This sounds like it’s NOT going to increase mastodon and pixelfed’s reach

      it doesn’t sound like you’ll be able to post from Mastodon to Threads

      It looks like they’re only pushing right now, they’re not allowing Threads users to pull content in from the broader fediverse. Threads content gets exposure on Mastodon, but not the other way around.

      • MudMan
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        And that’s why all social media is bad.

        Look, open socials can either replace closed socials or be a niche little fun exclusive club for techheads exclusively focused on Star Trek and Linux and how open socials should replace closed socials. You can’t have both.

        So if the conclusion here is that popular social media sucks… yeah, you’re right. Because all social media sucks. The content won’t be better if the same people join Mastodon than if they come from Threads.

      • @[email protected]
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        12 years ago

        I don’t agree at all here. If someone on threads has posts you like, you can follow them. If not, you won’t see any posts from threads on your feed.

        Your feed will either be the same as before, or better than before.

          • @[email protected]
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            12 years ago

            See what? Posts from threads? Depends on your instance and how you browse.

            Lemmy has no microblogging features so you won’t be seeing any (unless they’re specifically posting to Lemmy)

            Kbin I’m not too sure since there are microblogging features but idk how they work.

            Mastodon; you will see posts from threads users if you follow them, or if someone you follow boosts a post from them.
            If you browse by the explore/posts tab, you might see some threads posts. Also from the ‘All’/federated tab.
            You’ll be able to block threads for your account, or choose an instance that’s defederated.

            • sour
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              am use kbin microblogging feature

      • @[email protected]
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        22 years ago

        No, not always, but there are people I know I like and respect and used to follow on Twitter that are on threads and I’m not.

          • Draconic NEO
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            22 years ago

            If enough people that they want to follow give them the “mastodon.social treatment” as I’m calling it (which basically means rejecting them based on being on an instance with a bad reputation) they might, they also might not. I know plenty of people who choose to stay on Mastodon.social even though they’re limited by lots of servers and users for spam. Same would probably happen with threads. Though I imagine there will be significantly more animosity towards threads than mastodon.social because threads is not just a bot infested mastodon instance, it’s run by Facebook.

    • paraphrand
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      132 years ago

      It’s funny how “mastodon is too complicated” stops when the instance they pick is Threads.

      🤔

      • 0x1C3B00DA
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        22 years ago

        People who say that are generally talking about the signup where you have to pick an instance. And then there’s the worry over which other servers yours federates with. If you isolate your attention to a single instance, then all those worries go away.

        The same already happens on the fediverse in regards to mastodon itself. A lot of people discuss the fediverse almost wholly in terms of mastodon.

        • Draconic NEO
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          22 years ago

          Also mastodon.social the flagship instance really kind of sucks. It has strict rate limiting and poor moderation (gotten lots of follows and follow requests from gross people on there. Also means it’ll usually be Limited by other servers or blocked by their users.

          So doesn’t really help with the idea that all of Mastodon isn’t like that.

            • Draconic NEO
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              12 years ago

              I think it might depend on what VPN you use, I was able to use it from VPNs and Tor (Tor is kind of slow though). On Tor though it very much struggled to load images and the requests would take longer.

        • paraphrand
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          22 years ago

          But now it’s one of hundreds you could pick to participate in ActivityPub/Mastodon.

  • MentalEdge
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    682 years ago

    Didn’t most of the fediverse preemptively de-federate them already?

    • @[email protected]
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      122 years ago

      Is there a list of instance somewhere that we can pick from? I thought someone was putting together a list.

    • Draconic NEO
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      12 years ago

      A lot of instances did, the flagship instances run by the Devs of Mastodon didn’t. They think that it’s good and want to encourage it, though at the same time their instances have a spam problem so bad many instances have decided to limit them, making it harder to follow people if your account is on them.

      Also noticed that many people say they won’t follow people who are on Mastodon.social or approve follow requests. Which is a bit extreme but I also get it, there’s lots of spambots and not great people on those instances and moderation is slow since they’re so big which doesn’t really help.

    • SkaveRat
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      102 years ago

      some do.

      I have a small community masto instance and don’t. If my users want to block the instance, it’s literally 2 clicks and a confirmation away.

      Doing to server wide is massively patronizing towards the users

      • 👁️👄👁️
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        12 years ago

        I see it as just virtue signaling. At the end, we can choose to not join those servers who defederate with them, but I can also think it’s a stupid decision at the same time lol.

      • @[email protected]
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        72 years ago

        Nah, users can vote and then if they don’t get the vote they want, they can go to another instance.

        • SkaveRat
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          62 years ago

          yup. And that’s what we did. The majority of people either didn’t care either way or didn’t want to block it. With way more “don’t block” than “block”. So that’s that. At least for now

        • kpw
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          32 years ago

          Users on Mastodon can simply block their domain if they want to.

          • @[email protected]
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            22 years ago

            But can’t Mastodon post on Lemmy and Lemmy can’t block instances on an individual basis? That’s the way I understand it currently stands. I don’t want threads showing up in my feed and would like to block them.

      • MentalEdge
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        52 years ago

        You might want to look up what patronize means, in the common phrase “don’t patronize me” it’s used sarcastically.

        Essentially, replace the word with “helpful” in your sentence, and you’ll see why it doesn’t fit.

        • SkaveRat
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          102 years ago

          yeah, I get what you mean. But it’s still mostly fitting in the way I feel about it. Basically: users can think for themselves. They don’t need me to take care of the bit scary world out there.

          Doing so for a whole instance feels super condecending. “I know better than you what you want. I’m going to block it”

          • MentalEdge
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            I get what you meant, which is why I replied, I’m saying that that word means the opposite of what you intended.

            To patronize someone is not a bad thing, the word means “to be someone’s customer/patron” and through doing so, supporting and helping them. That’s where patreons name comes from, for example.

            In the phrase “don’t patronize me” it’s used sarcastically to say “I know you’re trying to help, but please don’t” but the word doesn’t actually refer to someone who is going over your head to do things for you. It’s actual meaning is 100% positive, and hence confuses what you’re saying. Which is that blocking threads should be done by users because it should be their decision.

            Instead, your final sentences literal meaning, paraphrased, is “a server-wide block would be really good and helpful for all my users”.

              • MentalEdge
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                2 years ago

                Can’t argue with real-world use, but man that is a semantic shift that is doing the original word dirty.

                Apparently patronage and other forms of the word are having their definitions affected, too.

                I read a lot of books so I’m definitely a lot more used to how words are used up to several decades ago.

            • loobkoob
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              92 years ago

              I don’t know if it’s perhaps a regional thing but, in the UK, “being patronising” is used pretty much exclusively in the pejorative sense, with a similar meaning to “condescending”. I don’t think I’ve ever heard (in actual conversation) “being patronising” used to mean someone is giving patronage, in fact - we would say someone is “giving patronage” or “is a patron” instead. We also pronounce “patronise” differently, for whatever reason: “patron” is “pay-trun”, “patronage” is “pay-trun-idge” but “patronise” is “pah-trun-ise”.

              It seems the pejorative use of the word dates back to at least 1755, too, so it’s not exactly a new development.

              • @[email protected]
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                2 years ago

                What about patronising as in ‘patronising this business’? A little archaic, but I do hear it from time to time, usually with the ‘pay’ pronounciation.

                Then again, if someone is accusing me of being patronising (which happens a lot for reasons I don’t quite understand, but I digress), it’s split odds whether I’m “pah-trun-ising” or “pay-trun-ising”.

                English is weird (perhaps this is its wyrd?)

              • @[email protected]
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                52 years ago

                in the UK, “being patronising” is used pretty much exclusively in the pejorative sense, with a similar meaning to “condescending”

                It’s the same in the US, and has been ever since I can remember. No idea where this person lives that the positive meaning would be the first thing they’d think of.

              • MentalEdge
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                12 years ago

                They might be, but that’s generally a bad idea online (without using /s), someone like me who can’t hear their tone of voice could come along :D

    • @[email protected]
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      472 years ago

      Mastodon.social, the biggest instance ran by Mastodon devs didn’t and encourages wait and see approach.

  • @[email protected]
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    52 years ago

    I’m not exactly sure where, how or why people would join Threads, but if it’s going to be part of the fediverse I wouldn’t be all against it.

    I probably wouldn’t join it, but I think it would be better for the Meta-users to be exposed to the internet outside of the environment controlled by Meta.

    There’s a reason why everyone is angry on Facebook. Hint: It isn’t that everyone is angry. It’s because “engagement” is encouraged.

    If they were exposed to a place where people could choose more freely to engage with anger, they’d be surprised with how little people actually respond to shit/rant postings. It’s perfectly fine to rant and shitpost, but the fediverse definitely shows that there is more to the internet than that. I won’t mind giving it a shot at showing them. (As long as I can block the entire thing at any time I want.)

    • GhostalmediaOP
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      1352 years ago

      My primary concern is that they appear to be allowing Thread content to be pulled into other Fedi clients, but not the inverse. So Threads content on Mastodon, but no Mastodon content on Threads. That’s not super great for Mastodon exposure.

      Also, given the vast differences in daily active users, wouldn’t Mastodon become flooded, and eventually dependent, on Threads content?

      • @[email protected]
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        702 years ago

        You know what, I was very confused why they would add Fedi integration but unidirectional integration makes a ton of sense from a corporate scumbag POV.

      • @[email protected]
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        192 years ago

        I personally remain neutral on this. The issue you point out is definitely a problem, but Threads is just now testing this, so I think it’s too early to tell. Same with embrace, extend, extinguish concerns. People should be vigilant of the risks, and prepared, but we’re still mostly in wait and see land. On the other hand, threads could be a boon for the fidiverse and help to make it the main way social media works in five years time. We just don’t know yet.

        There are just always a lot of “the sky is falling” takes about Threads that I think are overblown and reactionary

        Just to be extra controversial, I’m actually coming around on Meta as a company a bit. They absolutely were evil, and I don’t fully trust them, but I think they’ve been trying to clean up their image and move in a better direction. I think Meta is genuinely interested in Activitypub and while their intentions are not pure, and are certainly profit driven, I don’t think they have a master plan to destroy the fidiverse. I think they see it in their long term interest for more people to be on the fidiverse so they can more easily compete with TikTok, X, and whatever comes next without the problems of platform lockin and account migration. Also meta is probably the biggest player in open source llm development, so they’ve earned some open source brownie points from me, particularly since I think AI is going to be a big thing and open source development is crucial so we don’t end up ina world where two or three companies control the AGI that everyone else depends on. So my opinion of Meta is evolving past the Cambridge Analytica taste that’s been in my mouth for years.

        • Josh
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          32 years ago

          I actually agree with this take.

        • @[email protected]
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          312 years ago

          You had us in the first half, but anyone who thinks theres any part of meta thats trustworthy is either paid off or an idiot. Sorry bud, but thats fresh horseshit flavor thats rinsing the CA taste from your mouth.

          Facebook isnt even actually dead yet, youre 4-6 decades too early to even entertain the thought that meta is safe to conditionally trust.

          • @[email protected]
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            82 years ago

            That’s totally fair and I knew that would be controversial. I’m very heavily focused on AI professionally and I give very few shits about social media, so maybe my perspective is a little different. The fact that there is an active open source AI community owes a ton to Meta training and releasing their Llama LLM models as open source. Training LLMs is very hard and very expensive, so Meta is functionally subsidizing the open source AI community, and their role I think is pretty clearly very positive in that they are preventing AI from being entirely controlled by Google and OpenAI/Microsoft. Given the stakes of AI, the positive role Meta has played with open source developers, it’s really hard to be like “yeah but remember CA 7 years ago and what about how Facebook rotted my uncle’s brain!”

            All of that said, I’m still not buying a quest, or signing up for any Meta social products, I don’t like or trust them. I just don’t have the rage hardon a lot of people do.

            • @[email protected]
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              62 years ago

              Big difference between “large company tries to undermine its competitors” and “large company is working with people to advance new tech.”

              Meta is using open source to try and slow down its 2 biggest enemies in the field who have better funding and resources. That open source benefits the masses is incidental and likely regretful from metas perspective. They just dont have a better option to prevent themselves being left in the dust.

        • @[email protected]
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          52 years ago

          Ok, so hold the fuck up for a second - most of what you said makes sense, but then you anthropomorphised a massive company that has more influence on global politics than most governments, and could be fairly blamed for mental health issues globally

          Facebook is, and was, evil. They do not have morals, they have metrics. Their metrics have not changed.

          They invented doomscrolling, intentionally - this wasn’t something they stumbled upon, they did unethical psychological experiments on users.

          For example, they shadow banned users. They made it so no one could see their posts, just to see what feelings of isolation would do to engagement… Luckily it didn’t increase engagement. They created invisible echo chambers and artificial controversy, which did work, and is now common practice for social media

          Facebook has created some of the greatest open source software in existence. React and pytorch are two that I use frequently. They were first made while the company was actively experimenting with the power to manipulate democracy

          Facebook has some of the best engineers, and does a ton of great open source work. They also have some of the most amoral people in positions of authority.

          They’re not the same people - the teams who do AI research at Facebook? Great people doing great work

          The people who do social media at Facebook? Never trust them. They have a PR problem and are treading lightly.

          They want to mine the fediverse for information on users. I don’t think this is an EEE plan… But I think that every time this arm of the company finds themselves in a position of control, they ask “how can we leverage this?”

          • @[email protected]
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            12 years ago

            All great points, maybe my view of Meta as a single entity isn’t a good way to think about them. I wasn’t aware of their open source work outside of LLMs so that is interesting. Your right on with your assessment of what they’ve done in the social media space. I disagree on the point that they want to mine fidiverse user data, just because I don’t think they need to do all this work to integrate threads into activitypub to do that, there are easier ways. But I think your right to be skeptical of Metas intentions.

            On the other hand, big companies adopting Activitypub could be a great thing for the fediverse. So risks and benefits. I’ll keep my neutrality for now. But you make a good argument.

            • @[email protected]
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              32 years ago

              Of course they’re doing it to mine user data - their primary business model is to run platforms to collect user data. They then sell user data both directly and by running the second largest targeted ad network.

              Their public stance they made when renaming themselves meta is “we found out social networks have a lifecycle, and we want to get ahead of the curve and create/capture the platforms people are moving to”

              There’s plenty more to say about Facebook and big companies entering the fediverse but I kinda feel like anyone who is reading this understands the issue to a significant extent

      • breakfastmtn
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        312 years ago

        Also, given the vast differences in daily active users, wouldn’t Mastodon become flooded, and eventually dependent, on Threads content?

        Servers only pull subscribed user content, so it’s not like the option is nothing or The Firehose. Meta can’t push content into the Fediverse.

        I think it’s important to note that Meta doesn’t have more power than anyone else here. They’re just a large instance. They have the same forces keeping them honest as anyone else and their size doesn’t change the incentives for mods and admins. Mods don’t have an interest in working for Meta for free. If they’re spending too much of their time moderating that content, Threads will be limited or defederated.

        Given Meta’s size and history it’s understandable to be concerned. At the end of the day though, they’ll either play nice or get bounced. I think we’ll be fine either way.

        • GhostalmediaOP
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          52 years ago

          What about clients that have discovery feeds for content you might not be subbed to? Would that be a problem?

          • @[email protected]
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            52 years ago

            What do you mean discovery feeds? Like the federated/all tab?

            Because those feeds only show posts that the instance knows about, which is (mostly) posts from people that at least one person on your instance followed.

            If you check the all tab on a small instance, it’s a lot quieter than it is on something like mastodon.social.

          • breakfastmtn
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            62 years ago

            That’s a good question. I don’t know. My guess is that you could be exposed to Threads content you don’t want in the same way you could be exposed to Mastodon content you don’t want. I can’t imagine they’re not set up to respect blocks, mutes, or server suspensions though, right? They have a way bigger problem than Threads if they don’t.

      • @[email protected]
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        22 years ago

        If they opened as read only then they created API in a most convoluted way possible. If that ridonculous claim is true then I wonder when we see first third party Threads apps.

  • @[email protected]
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    202 years ago

    I wouldn’t be too worried about Threads joining the fediverse.

    They had the perfect opportunity to dethrone X with a superior app but have given users the most barebones piece of shit that doesn’t even have support for hashtags or trending topics.

    Mastodon has this functionality.

    Last time I booted up Threads, my feed was flooded with e-girls posting twerking videos. I don’t follow any such accounts on Threads nor Instagram and I don’t like it when my social media feels like a softcore porn platform.