Skip Navigation
25 comments
  • I have been writing up an essay on my thoughts. Facebook still seems a long way out from implementing federation so I hope I can have a polling feature into the codebase before they do and we can vote on it.

  • Question: does anyone here expect a giant billion(s) dollar company to not embrace, extend, extinguish regarding this protocol which these federated services are built upon?

  • I look towards the experts to try and form my opinion here, as I am not one.

    Our stance: We have been advocating for interoperability between platforms for years. The biggest hurdle to users switching platforms when those platforms become exploitative is the lock-in of the social graph, the fact that switching platforms means abandoning everyone you know and who knows you. The fact that large platforms are adopting ActivityPub is not only validation of the movement towards decentralized social media, but a path forward for people locked into these platforms to switch to better providers. Which in turn, puts pressure on such platforms to provide better, less exploitative services. This is a clear victory for our cause, hopefully one of many to come.

    https://blog.joinmastodon.org/2023/07/what-to-know-about-threads/

    I see that full blog as a "threads is good for the fediverse". I only look at and interact with local on this instance, but am generically against jumping to defederation because "no like".

    • It should be pointed out that the author of this article had a private meeting with Meta regarding Threads and signed a NDA. He is also the head of a company that receives funding based on the popularity of the Mastodon software. There may or may not be deals we don't know about, but he is certainly not an unbiased party.

      Meta's business is monitoring and using online social networks to manipulate human behavior. Their massive userbase will cause Threads content and users to dominate instances that federate with them. It's more than just "no like".

    • I am completely in favor of defederating from Threads. My personal bias against Zuck and his monsters aside, there's the very real chance that he'll use ActivityPub as free content for his own product's growth, slowly adding changes to the protocol until the "best experience" is only via threads

      There is precedent in the form of Google and XMPP. In another thread, someone argued in favor of Meta and replied to that what happened was simply "Google outcompeted XMPP by offering a better user experience", not realizing that his argument was actually evidence against Meta. Google beat the competition. Thinking Meta will work to beat the competition (ActivityPub) is plausible.

      Remember when Facebook wanted to buy Snapchat, but Snap refused? Facebook then added the stories feature to FB, Insta and Whatsapp (the latter 2 apps bought in order to further consolidate its power), in order to bleed Snapchat's userbase.

      We can't predict the future, but Facebook Meta's past actions all point to a very likely chain of actions (Embrace, extend and extinguish).

  • One issue I'm thinking might happen if meta federates is that they will set up a sort of FOMO(fear of missing out) and make it possible for users of threads to talk in fediverse instances, but fediverse instances not able to talk to threads. I'm not sure if this is technically possible as per the activitypub protocol but just a thought I had.

    • It is possible and there is a currently live example of that: Akkoma and Mastodon. Akkoma can see and follow and interact with Mastodon users and toots, but Mastodon might not be able to see Akkoma posts, even if they're following its users. And this is happening as an unintended bug, not an intentional feature, as we can expect from zuck

25 comments