• FaceDeer
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      91 year ago

      Users “owning” their content in that way would be the instant death of the Fediverse. If anyone can put whatever nonsense license terms they want on each individual comment or post, how could that chaos possibly be federated?

      A better approach would be to recognize that if you’re posting your words up on a giant billboard you’re not going to be able to control who sees them.

      • It's A Faaaahhkeah!
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        31 year ago

        Users “owning” their content in that way would be the instant death of the Fediverse. If anyone can put whatever nonsense license terms they want on each individual comment or post, how could that chaos possibly be federated?

        A better approach would be to recognize that if you’re posting your words up on a giant billboard you’re not going to be able to control who sees them.

        Would quotes fall under fair use or copyright infringement?

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          I imagine legal questions would be answered similarly as with email. If I send an email from my abc.com email address to your xyz.com email address, who owns the email? Who has copyright over it? I think the answer should be the same for Fediverse content.

          • @[email protected]
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            21 year ago

            According to a quick Google search (I’m no expert on copyright law), a sufficiently original email is automatically copyrighted. What constitutes “sufficiently original” seems to be pretty arbitrary.

            So I guess if you post a short story, that’s automatically copyrighted. Commenting “this” is not. And then there’s a huge grey zone in the middle.

            • @[email protected]
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              21 year ago

              I think the same basically applies to… Anything. I mean a sufficiently original book is copyrighted but a sufficiently unoriginal book is not. Substitute book with any kind of media you want.

              Makes you realize how finicky copyright is.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      Is there single direction federation right now? I don’t think there is?

      Also it would probably be more realistic for instances to put a default license on content. Users don’t want to bother choosing a license and most users wouldn’t even know what that means.

  • @[email protected]
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    321 year ago

    It might have been fake, but weren’t there already reports of Meta blocking links/tags in relation to pixelfed?

    If it’s true, they’ve already proven to be a bad faith actor. I wouldn’t be surprised if they’re already scraping data from every other instance that federates with them.

    At the end of the day, one side will be right. My moneys on the anti-threads side.

    • Otter
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      171 year ago

      I don’t like the “they haven’t done anything bad yet” argument for staying federated, since there are much better reasons for not doing so. They either have already, and we aren’t talking about it yet (ex. downranking fediverse content, those closed door meetings with admins), or they are going to once they need to extract a profit.

      I wouldn’t be surprised if they’re already scraping data from every other instance that federates with them.

      I would be surprised if they aren’t already, and they’re likely scraping data from the defederated instances as well.

      I think microblog instances should stay federated because that’s the best way to fight against threads. (longer discussion here: https://lemmy.ca/post/11771031)

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      but weren’t there already reports of Meta blocking links/tags in relation to pixelfed?

      Much more likely a result of Meta’s notoriously shitty auto moderation algorithms than anything nefarious. I promise Meta is not risking the bad press and potential legal litigation to censor a service with 22k MAU.

      they’ve already proven to be a bad faith actor.

      They’ve done this for decades.

      I wouldn’t be surprised if they’re already scraping data from every other instance that federates with them.

      I don’t know why people keep spreading this nonsense. If your instance is publicly visible (which it is) then Meta is likely already scraping it. They do not need federation to do that.

      • Draconic NEO
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        1 year ago

        I don’t know why people keep spreading this nonsense. If your instance is publicly visible (which it is) then Meta is likely already scraping it. They do not need federation to do that.

        They do it because they want to make the “Meta is already scraping anyway, so we should just all agree to their terms of service and start federating with them and become one big happy family”. It’s just good old anti-defederation rhetoric.

  • @[email protected]
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    111 year ago

    It can’t. But that was never the intention. Soul was never the intention. The intention was reducing reliance on proprietary and cancerous platforms.

  • @[email protected]
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    51 year ago

    Many people like simplistic garbage. You can’t convince them to like something better, as that creates demands on them to grow as a person, when they likely have other priorities in their lives that demand their attention more forcefully.

    This is why McDonalds is the worlds most successful restaurant. Not because it is good, but because it is undemanding.

    So, when people think we can pull users from the McDonalds crowd with superior quality, it just makes me laugh.

  • @[email protected]
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    21 year ago

    Can we stop all this philosophising and just get on with enjoying it for what it is? Please?

    I’m really tired of hearing everybody’s thoughts on Meta and Threads. And souls. And money. And the future. There are too many captains of the ship who want their 15 minutes of steering time. Opinions ate like assholes, everybody has one.

    If you want Meta and Threads in your life, then join it or an instance that is going to federate with it. If you don’t, move to an instance that won’t. Same applies for any community that your part of. Or start your own. That’s the beauty of this.

    Can we please let it rest?

            • @[email protected]
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              21 year ago

              So, since I’m not going somewhere and then complaining about going there, my actions are reasonable and normal. Since you clicked on the post, and then complained about what it clearly was going to be about, yours are not. Thus, we are not the same, and your “yea you too” comment simply made no sense.

              Not that any of this is particularly surprising on the internet.

              • @[email protected]
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                1 year ago

                I think your confusing me with somebody who cares what your view of your actions is, or what your expectations on the internet is.

                All you’ve done is complain about me posting my opinion. Not the actual opinion. But that I just posted it.

                If you don’t agree with me, that’s cool. But try to use a few more brain cells to make it a constructive argument that we can discuss rather than the childish bullshit you’ve posted so far.

                • @[email protected]
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                  11 year ago

                  The irony of you showing up here to bitch about something you had no reason to even click and then insulting someone else’s brain while they are literally demonstrating more thought than you is just hilarious.

                • @[email protected]
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                  21 year ago

                  I haven’t complained about a single thing. All I did was try to give you an idea that you may not have thought of, and then make an amusing observation and answer a question of yours.

                  Not my fault if it bothered you.

                  I don’t disagree with you at all. I just thought that maybe you hadn’t considered that you don’t have to read something if you suspect you may not like it. This doesn’t occur to everyone, you see.

  • @[email protected]
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    11 year ago

    Does the fediverse need to maintain its “soul”? As long as it preserves user choice and corporate resistance, the rest isn’t required and can be maintained in those specific instances.

    • bean
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      41 year ago

      Yeah same. I know what they mean but it’s not what’s there and it’s hard to take it seriously 🙈

  • Lvxferre [he/him]
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    401 year ago

    The core idea of the fediverse is the same as democracy - that nobody should control the whole. Both are similar enough to allow comparisons.

    Threads in the Fediverse is like a powerful dictatorship trying to “deepen its bonds” with a small but democratic government. The dictatorship will eventually exploit the power asymmetry to control the democracy, direct or indirectly, effectively erasing it. In that situation, the best approach is to simply not play along the dictatorship. (Defederate Threads.)

    Another threat to democracy is internal: the centralisation of control over the whole into a few hands. In the case of the Fediverse, this is the reliance on central systems (front-end software, back-end software, instances, discovery systems, etc.). I see what the author proposes as a “Universal Declaration on Fediverse Rights” as, potentially, a new mechanism enabling those central systems - who gets to decide what goes in that declaration?

    So yes, I think that instances should defederate Threads and encourage other instances to do so. However, they should not do it too hard, to the point that you’re effectively dictating what others should be doing.

    An important detail is that the author falls into the fallacy of conflating epistemic and moral matters. This is specially explicit here:

    Because without believing in the existence of a objective truth (which they don’t, because they attribute themselves to moral relativism),

    That fallacy has a deep impact across the text because the author believes that people can eventually agree on moral grounds based on reason. Often they don’t - because it depends on the moral premises that each adopt, and moral premises are not true/false matters to begin with.

    the actual problem is that the Fediverse is internally shattered and cannot agree on anything, including basic moral rules and principles.

    That is not a problem. That’s a feature.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      31 year ago

      You make a few good points, I will try to counter them.

      The core idea of the fediverse is the same as democracy - that nobody should control the whole. Both are similar enough to allow comparisons.

      True, its for separation of powers but this doesn’t mean there cannot be any central rules decided upon. For example the consititution of the united states. However, because the Fediverse doesn’t have a government, I think a better analogy would be a league of more or less democractic countries that work together. Of course they can agree to an universal declaration, like the united nations agreed on human rights for exactly the same reasons.

      So yes, I think that instances should defederate Threads and encourage other instances to do so. However, they should not do it too hard, to the point that you’re effectively dictating what others should be doing.

      Agreed. However, there is a difference between a constitution of a country and agreements between countries. For example, the NATO has an agreement with the US that if any NATO country is attacked, US will jump in. However, this is completely build on trust, if Trump decides to not jump in, no one will be able to stop him, meaning there isn’t any higher institution that controls the different actors in this agreement other than the actors themselves. This is why I think the analogue of a league of nations is better, because agreements can be much more loose here.

      Of course, there would still be a question who would write this document, but the basic idea would be that if it was supported by many servers, it would be put up more or less by word of mouth. To do this most effectively, it would be good to create the document in a way that many servers willing to agree to it. For example through a ActivityPub commitee that exists anyways or a popular meetup of Fediverse servers. And eventually, the most reasonable one will be hold up by the most servers. I think of it as a dynamic process.

      But yeah, there would have to be put some thought into it how to craft it and most likely we don’t have the institutions yet to do something like that.

      That fallacy has a deep impact across the text because the author believes that people can eventually agree on moral grounds based on reason. Often they don’t - because it depends on the moral premises that each adopt, and moral premises are not true/false matters to begin with.

      Could be true, I need to think about this longer. However, I still think that as a foundation, basic fediverse rights could be agreed upon through reason and that they could become effective tools against Meta and to improve the Fediverse in general. Of course, they shouldn’t be too detailed and let enough freedoms how to realize them technically.

      the actual problem is that the Fediverse is internally shattered and cannot agree on anything, including basic moral rules and principles.

      That is not a problem. That’s a feature.

      I think its good that different moral rule sets can easily develop and implemented; but I think sooner or later it will become a problem, at the latest when more radical parts become pre-dominant. Its not like the Fediverse will automatically develop in a good direction. I don’t believe in a hierarchy-free, anarchic society. We need institutions and agreements to ensure that the Fediverse stays a good place.

      • Lvxferre [he/him]
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        41 year ago

        It’s less about the separation of powers and more about the fragmentation of each power. As in, you should be able to ditch any governing power that you dislike, and curb down its influence on your experience to a bare minimum.

        So perhaps the best analogy with RL politics would be a confederation with lax citizenship laws and federated entities being free to choose which other federated entities they interact with. With a key difference:

        The Fediverse can be completely acephalous. And the reason becomes evident once you analyse the UN of your example - it’s effectively Europe and USA wearing a bunch of sock puppets, pretending to talk in the name of the “nations” (actually countries, but whatever) of the world. An acephalous Fediverse would not develop a similar problem.

        In this case (Threads), it means that, while we should promote defederation, how to deal with it should be, ultimately, up to each instance.

        NATO example

        I don’t pay taxes to any NATO country so what I’m going to say is solely based on the Fediverse situation, plus whatever I parsed from your example:

        We should not need to rely on “trust” on first place. Instead a better approach is to acknowledge that people will fuck it up, they will do things that counter the best interests of the whole, and that the system needs to handle it.

        For example through a ActivityPub commitee that exists anyways or a popular meetup of Fediverse servers.

        What happens if said commitee becomes hostile, defending its own self-interests in detriment of the ones of the rest of the Fediverse?

        I think its good that different moral rule sets can easily develop and implemented; but I think sooner or later it will become a problem, at the latest when more radical parts become pre-dominant.

        Or we could leave those moral matters up to each instance to decide. And the ones screwing up on moral matters get isolated.

        • @[email protected]OP
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          21 year ago

          It’s less about the separation of powers and more about the fragmentation of each power. As in, you should be able to ditch any governing power that you dislike, and curb down its influence on your experience to a bare minimum.

          I said separation of powers because you said the Fediverse should be like a democracy. Then it should have that. For me, democracy is first of all a better way to control those in power, which is why I think we shouldn’t think of the Fediverse as a democracy, because it isn’t; at least not currently. It’s not like you have a say in the general development of the Fediverse, because there is no real centre to it anyways.

          So, I agree with you here, I just don’t think that’s what a democracy is. If the Fediverse would be a democracy, it would have government, a constitution, etc.

          But as I said, I agree with you how we should think of the Fediverse: as acephalous. However, why should it be completely acephalous? Why shouldn’t servers make agreements with one another? The Fedipact is one of those, the badspace, too. And while I’m not a fan of the first one, its generally fine, if they don’t force people into it (like you said). Why then not try to do the same thing but with some actual principles?

          What happens if said commitee becomes hostile, defending its own self-interests in detriment of the ones of the rest of the Fediverse?

          Then many servers will opt out of it and it will become irrelevant. That’s the beauty of it. Because its only an agreement that is not controlled by any centrlized entity, its not as binding. The same as with the Fedipact: it wasn’t set up by any central entity and will not be enforced by it other than the community or powerful servers. But that the community and powerful servers will try to influence the course of the Fediverse is the the case anyways!

          And the ones screwing up on moral matters get isolated.

          For Nazi-instances, that’s easy, but for example in the case of Threads, it quickly becomes very complicated to agree on which instances should be isolated and which not. How do you determine that if not through speaking to other servers? And if you do that, you can just as well speak to them about common rights and write them down somewhere. It’s the same thing but with more transparency.

          We cannot build the Fediverse without trust and mutual agreements. It will just not work; and we are also already doing it.

      • Pussista
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        51 year ago

        The US is a failed and corrupted state that we don’t need to recreate. It’s built on more wrong things than good. Keep your American propaganda to yourself and don’t infest the actually free fediverse with your liberal corporatist ideals.

        And this isn’t even touching on the myriad of reasons for us not to federate with an entity like Meta. Not even gonna iterate on them because they’ve been infinitely chewed in and out.

  • @[email protected]
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    111 year ago

    I mean there are a shitload of reasons to not federate with Threads, but I feel like “it will federate ads to your server” is kinda the only one I should need to mention.

  • @[email protected]
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    191 year ago

    Meta’s moral shortcomings are even more reasons to federate with them and try to win over users and pressure Meta to implement better digital rights as well.

    “The terrorists moral shortcomings are even more reasons to negotiate with them and try to win them over.”

    Don’t negotiate with terrorists.

    Also the article sets up defederation from Meta as if it doesn’t do anything. I don’t think that’s true though.

    • Otter
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      21 year ago

      The terrorists moral shortcomings are even more reasons to negotiate with them and try to win them over

      You’re not negotiating with the terrorists (Meta), you’re engaging with the public to explain why the terrorists are bad and why they shouldn’t buy what’s being sold.

      The argument is that we aren’t going to win this with sheer numbers or funding, so we need to slowly get people to understand why they are better off picking Mastodon/Fediverse over threads. Every instagram user is already being tossed into Threads, and you can’t bring those people over if they never see posts or content from the Fediverse

      • @[email protected]
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        91 year ago

        you can’t bring those people over if they never see posts or content from the Fediverse

        It’s still possible. Reddit didn’t became popular because it federated with Digg.

        When Lemmy will become the reference for human provided answers, people will join. How fast it will happen depends on how bad the experience on Reddit becomes.

      • Facni
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        11 year ago

        If you defederate with them, I thought they could still see you.

      • @[email protected]
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        51 year ago

        Maybe. But that’s a big maybe. It could equally be that Threads becomes the most powerful entity on the Fediverse and what they do becomes law (like shutting off a certain instance).

          • @[email protected]
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            61 year ago

            In principle, yes. But if 99% of users are on one server, then that server has a disproportional amount of power in the network. If they choose to defederate another server, it’s essentially a death sentence.

              • @[email protected]
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                21 year ago

                Most users would probably jump away from that server in that case, so in all likelihood they would.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 year ago

              That makes absolutely no sense. If they choose to defederate then it is no different than if they had never federated in the first place, which is what it sounds like you want.

              • @[email protected]
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                11 year ago

                It is different because if we defederate in the first place, then perhaps 99% of users would not congregate in that server.

                • @[email protected]
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                  11 year ago

                  What server are you referring to? Threads? They already have 99.9%. No one is going to join Threads because it’s “the biggest server”, they’re going to join because they’ve never heard of the Fediverse and want to chat with their friends and follow businesses and personalities.

                  If they know what the Fediverse is, they’re not going to join Threads, because no fully-informed person is going to make that decision.

          • Draconic NEO
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            11 year ago

            That is not really true and anyone who actually believes that is in for a rude awakening.

            See I think that you’re a bit confused because when they say that or things similar to that what they really mean is that no one person controls the fediverse. Not that there are no laws or rules because they’re absolutely are.

            For example if you go around spouting bigotry you will find yourself banned from a majority of public federated servers, and if you are on a server that you are not the owner of you will likely find yourself banned from that one. The fact that it’s decentralized does not mean that it doesn’t have rules or is some kind of free speech safe haven.

          • Facni
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            11 year ago

            XMPP hadn’t, until google put his hands on it.

        • Otter
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          Yea the other part of my reasoning is to try and prevent them from getting to that point.

          The short version of which is that our biggest selling point is “Join Mastodon, you can see all the same content and do the same things, but it’s run by a non-profit instead of Facebook”. Defederation means we lose that point, and it’s going to be very difficult for Mastodon to compete with the money and manpower that facebook has.

          “Join Mastodon to see content that you can’t see otherwise” will have a much harder time competing with “Join Threads to see content that you can’t see otherwise”

  • @[email protected]
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    61 year ago

    how can the Fediverse grow without loosing its soul in the process?

    It can’t? Rather obvious that the “soul” of a community is defined by it’s members and the bigger the community the more mainstream this soul will become. Maybe the federation mechanic offers some solutions here, but that remains to be seen.

    • IndiBrony
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      111 year ago

      I think we’re up to 16 now. The Fediverse is being ruined.

  • Konala Koala
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    1 year ago

    Are you sure you don’t mean a Universal Declaration of Fediverse Independence from Reddit, Threads, and Twitter/X?