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Lemmy.world Admin Response to Meta/Threads

There has been significant discussion in recent weeks regarding Meta/Threads. We would like to express our disappointment with the negative and threatening tone of some of these discussions. We kindly ask everyone to engage in civil discourse and remember that not everyone will share the same opinions, which is perfectly acceptable.

When considering whether or not to defederate from Threads, we're looking for a decision based on facts that prioritize your safety. We strive to remain neutral to make an informed choice.

First, there seem to be some misconceptions about how the Fediverse operates based on several posts. We’ve compiled some resource links to help explain the details and address any misunderstandings.

Fed Tips , Fediverse , ActivityPub

Initial Thoughts:

It seems unlikely that Meta will federate with Lemmy. When/if Meta adopts ActivityPub, it will likely affect Mastodon only rather than Lemmy, given Meta's focus on being a Twitter alternative at the moment.

Please note that we have a few months before Threads will even federate with Mastodon, so we have some time to make the right decision.

Factors to Consider:
Factors to consider if Meta federates with Lemmy:

Privacy - While it’s true that Meta's privacy settings for the app are excessive, it’s important to note that these settings only apply to users of the official Threads app and do not impact Lemmy users. It’s worth mentioning that Lemmy does not collect any personal data, and Meta has no means of accessing such data from this platform. In addition, when it comes to scraping data from your post/comments, Meta doesn’t need ActivityPub to do that. Anyone can read your profile and public posts as it is today.

Moderation - If a server hosts a substantial amount of harmful content without performing efficient and comprehensive moderation, it will create an excessive workload for our moderators. Currently, Meta is utilizing its existing Instagram moderation tools. Considering there were 95 million posts on the first day, this becomes worrisome, as it could potentially overwhelm us and serve as a sufficient reason for defederation.

Ads - It’s possible if Meta presents them as posts.

Promoting Posts - It’s possible with millions of users upvoting a post for it to trend.

Embrace, extend, and extinguish (EEE) - We don't think they can. If anyone can explain how they technically would, please let us know. Even if Meta forks Lemmy and gets rid of the original software, Lemmy will survive.

Instance Blocking - Unlike Mastodon, Lemmy does not provide a feature for individual users to block an instance (yet). This creates a dilemma where we must either defederate, disappointing those who desire interaction with Threads, or choose not to defederate, which will let down those who prefer no interaction with Threads.

Blocking Outgoing Federation - There is currently no tool available to block outgoing federation from lemmy.world to other instances. We can only block incoming federation. This means that if we choose to defederate with our current capabilities, Threads will still receive copies of lemmy.world posts. However, only users on Threads will be able to interact with them, while we would not be able to see their interactions. This situation is similar to the one with Beehaw at the moment. Consequently, it leads to significant fragmentation of content, which has real and serious implications.

Conclusion:
From the points discussed above, the possible lack of moderation alone justifies considering defederation from Threads. However, it remains to be seen how Meta will handle moderation on such a large scale. Additionally, the inability of individuals to block an instance means we have to do what is best for the community.

If you have any added points or remarks on the above, please send them to @mwadmin@mastodon.world.

381 comments
  • I appreciate the thoughtful response and agree - no need for a knee jerk reaction when there is still some time until a decision needs to be made, and there are still quite a few unanswered questions.

    As long as you maintain this level of transparency I trust that you make the right decision for lemmy.world.

    As usual, thank you!

  • Please don’t give Meta even an inch.

    They wouldn’t be stepping into the Frediverse if they didn’t have a plan to either monetize the user base or destroy their competition.

    Don’t let them take a pound and then some.

  • Embrace, extend, and extinguish (EEE) - We don’t think they can. If anyone can explain how they technically would, please let us know. Even if Meta forks Lemmy and gets rid of the original software, Lemmy will survive.

    It doesn't start out with maliciousness. The rank and file technical staff at Facebook aren't evil. Facebook understands the value of top tier tech talent and top dollar buys you smart people.

    The initial federation is rough, but the problems are resolved surprisingly quick. None of the doom and gloom comes to pass, and Facebook consistently acts as a trustworthy actor. Their employees aren't really different than their open source counterparts. They make good faith contributions to open source codebases. Their collective experience with distributed systems proves useful in solving growing pains as the Federation grows.

    They eventually start to make proposals to ActivityPub. There's outrage but no one can come up with good technical objections, so they are approved. The doom and gloom didn't come to pass, and looks like it never will.

    Facebook doesn't need malicious intent for what's going down. It slowly, maybe quickly, becomes the dominate actor in the space. Facebook is pouring money into making Threads the best it can be, and what's wrong with them trying to build an audience?

    Thread's improvements set an increasingly high standard for what people expect. More uptime, cleaner UI, more responsive API calls, more personalized frontpage algorithms, higher resolution videos - more and more features. More and more cost. Even people who kneejerk reject Facebook recognize how much better their site is. There are still important reasons to go with Lemmy or Kbin over Threads, but FOSS projects have never been good at making their case in ways random-not-technical people can understand, let alone why they should care about them.

    After a while, Facebook starts walling people into their platform. Starts with little things like how Reddit added video and picture hosting to replace Imgur et al. It's not malicious, but rather from TPMs who are under pressure to increase engagement. After a while what else is there? Just don't turn the heat up too many degrees at once.

    It's wrong to think of Facebook as a uniquely bad actor. This isn't 90s/2000s Microsoft with blatantly transparent EEE aims. There have always been bad actors. There will always be bad actors. There are bad actors with us right now.

    Facebook needs to make money, and they won't do so by directly charging users. There's only one path forward for Facebook in this, and it will come at the expense of its users and everyone else in the Fediverse.

    Build something useful, then put up walls around it, and then exploit it for profit; the internet's monomyth. You don't have to read the writing on the wall, but it is there. Federating with Threads is signing your own death warrant.

    If the Fediverse experiment is going to survive, it needs to be able to withstand these bad actors. One of the ways it can do so is to recognize and reject them. Facebook has so many resources and so much power and we don't have to run the experiment to know where this will go. It is important to explicitly say "your goals do not align with what we are trying to build, and therefore we will not voluntarily interact with you."

    • Threads is already significantly bigger than the fediverse. They seeded their network with Instagram which already has more than 2 billion users. If people on the fediverse wanted the shiny big tech experience they'd already be there. I'm not against defederating with them but I don't think they need to federate at all to attract users based on uptime and features and a larger network. We're here because we don't like them.

      • I suspect Facebook's interest is not in users, but in content. I don't have an account but Threads seems to be mostly thirsty grindfluencer nonsense, which isn't the appeal of Twitter and friends. Regardless, if the Fediverse survives this particular threat simply because it wasn't big enough to be eaten, then I'd still be concerned. There will always be another bad actor coming down the pipeline.

    • There are still important reasons to go with Lemmy or Kbin over Threads, but FOSS projects have never been good at making their case in ways random-not-technical people can understand, let alone why they should care about them.

      Requoted for emphasis and truth.

      The F/OSS community is utterly terrible at messaging by and large and the result is that F/OSS looks like a place for whiny nerds, not the critical concept it needs to be perceived as.

    • Agreed EEE doesn't need to be strictly technical (but it certainly could be! See the example of increasingly complicated and quick moving web standards driven largely by Google which makes creating a new browser so hard).

      But a UX path could easily look like:

      Find the top 500 lemmy communities by size/engagement. Create those communities before the server ever opens up to the public. Pre-poulate with content.

      As people join, sort them into these communities based on their FB/Insta/Twitter/Threads profile. Indicate in some way that their existing contacts are into those things too and "may" be there to encourage adoption. Open up to federation.

      Voila, f/linux has 200k users in the first month all chatting and posting. People like content, so native lemmy users subscribe and start engaging over there. The UX is great, very polished, etc. Maybe they create an account migration tool.

      A while later, BigCorp decides it's time to pull the rug, defederates (for whatever reason, probably moderation issues), and now everyone who's still a Lemmy user is cut off from the communities they followed and the "native" Lemmy communities are tiny and quiet. Lemmy users cry foul, and no one cares because Big Corps get to set the message and for some reason people come out of the woodwork to defend them.

      Facebook has no incentive to Federate (seriously for what?), but has insane incentive to kill a federated service before it gets off the ground or ever grows to be anything approaching the size of reddit.

      I acknowledge Threads is a bigger problem for Mastodon, but you would be incredibly naive if you think there wasn't a team of people working feverishly at getting a FB owned ActivityPub targeted at a Reddit replacement. It would even integrate with Threads, like Kbin has microblogging.

    • Hey - thank you for this response, it's the first one I've seen that tried to take the question "How could they EEE?" seriously.

      What I still don't really understand is - how is this different from just creating a better competitor, without the federation at all? If you're worried about people choosing a superior, shinier corporate product, then surely they'd do this even without federation. At least with federation, we're not excluded from the walled garden, and don't have to have an account on their platform to interact with users we know or like there.

      I have a Facebook account because there are people in my life that I want to communicate with on there, and that is my only way of contacting them. If FB was a federated platform, then I wouldn't have to have that account to do that.

      The only (EEE-related) risk I see is that if Threads federates, they could then choose to defederate one day. But that would just make them into a walled garden again, the situation we already have today.

      • The way I see it is two fold.

        One, any success on Lemmy/Mastodon will contribute to their platform as well. These platforms are all about content and critical mass. By federating, they get access to "free" content. At their current states, these platforms are drops in the bucket for Facebook so I doubt it's a primary interest.

        Two, if they can get their content in front of Lemmy/Mastodon users, they hope some of those users will see it as "grass is greener" and switch sides. There's another comment in here where someone mentioned all their friends moved to FB Messenger but they didn't want to, but all their friends were using it, and it had features that weren't supported in standard texting, so they eventually gave in. Imagine that, but you can also see your friends feeds in front of you, just not some of the bonus stuff. It dangles the carrot closer to your face. Not only do you know about it, but now you also directly see it.

        This is all leading up to the "extinguish". They probably see the fediverse as evidence people are willing to move off Twitter, so they may also be willing to swith to Threads if they aren't too invested. On top of that, they may see the fediverse as a potential future threat. And it's much easier to kill off that threat early than to wait until it has evolved and grown. Again, these platforms are about critical mass, and if they can nab at it before it reaches that point, they're more likely to succeed in killing it.

      • Elsewhere I've contextualized the Reddit uprising away from the API changes and towards a broader question of "What actually is Reddit? Who is it for? Who gets to decide what direction it goes in?" Spez and the admins have an obvious answer, but they only own have the software and the servers. It's the communities that make Reddit, and communities are not owned by anyone.

        I like the Fediverse because it reflects that. It's up to the communities to form themselves and decide what rules they want and what servers they will reside on. Participating in the Fediverse means you provide some small amount of influence of what direction it goes in. Allowing a company like Facebook in means they will also get to influence it.

        I was trying to weave a narrative on how Facebook could slowly dominate and bend the Fediverse to its will and its interests - even if they aren't actively trying to do so. I suspect they don't have time to slowly ramp up Threads and I'm skeptical they are actually interested in federating. But there will always be more bad actors.

        An engineer notices a significant delay between when new posts appear on Threads and when they appear on the public API. There was a database issue their team resolved a few months ago, but another team owns the API server. They file a ticket and details their fix in the body.

        The intuition was correct and the issue is quickly fixed. A project manager tracking growth metrics notices a slowdown a few months later. After finding the ticket, they notice an increase in growth when the API issue was introduced, and the slowdown occurring not long after it was fixed. They are not comfortable with intentionally reintroducing it, but the conclusion is in the data.

        Later a very senior engineer learns all this. They like the Fediverse, but that's not what they are worried about. Their last performance review was poor. Their manager softly sounds the alarm about the next one. Their parent's nursing home is burning a hole in their finances. They can't afford to lose health insurance. Putting their kids through college is on the horizon. Their org chart has already been cut down over the last year, and there are rumors of more layoffs next year. Important people are asking difficult questions about Threads.

        Maybe just a fifteen minute delay so Threads can reach its target numbers.

    • So your argument revolves around the fact that Lemmy/kbin/FOSS projects are inferior interfaces and that will draw people to FB?

      If FB/Meta make a better product people should use it. Stop expecting users to kneecap themselves into using a worse product. All of the things you mentioned (uptime, cleaner ui, more responsive, better algorithms) are legitimate reasons to use other platforms. The average user doesn’t care about federation or instances or any of the other technical details and they never will. People don’t want to care about that stuff anymore.

      • You read my post and thought about it, even if you disagreed with the conclusion. I read yours and also disagreed, but thought enough about it to type this reply.

        That's what this is all actually about. Thinking about things you find interesting with other people you find interesting. I agree that people don't want to think about technical things, and that is my complaint about the FOSS community. People want to think about cats.

        The problem is not with any of the features themselves - they are all good things to have! If you run a service and rely on donations (and aren't Wikimedia), then maybe you can cover $300 a month but probably not $30k. Things are going to have to be frugal. The upside is they can run it however they think it provides the most value to their communities. Everyone wants to think about cats, and no one will try to dissuade you or try to nudge you into using the platform more.

        Facebook/Threads present themselves as free, but $30,000 will maybe cover a few junior employee's salary for a month. These things are expensive, and the money needs to come from somewhere. They'll operate at a huge loss while building up the platform, but eventually they'll need people to stop thinking about cats and start thinking about brands. That cycle has played out over and over and over again. Build something useful, build walls around it, and then exploit it for as much shareholder value as you can.

        Facebook doesn't want you to think about cats. It wants you to think about brands. If it is allowed to be part of the Fediverse community, it will flex its influence and move it towards its own interests.

        Pinboard is a simple one man Delicious like bookmarking site that charges a flat yearly fee for use. It comfortably covers its owner's living expenses. I've been on the lookout for my own Pinboard idea for years, and I'm toying with the idea of starting a feature packed instance that charges people a yearly fee to have an account on it. That would be fun to build but miserable to administrate.

        The different between PinboardLemmy and Facebook is I would have no reason to act against my user's interests. You get all the fancy features because you pay for them. Why would I not want people to think about cats? Why would I care about maximizing their time on the site? I care about making my mortgage payment each month.

        So go forth, and think about cats.

  • It seems unlikely that Meta will federate with Lemmy. When/if Meta adopts ActivityPub, it will likely affect Mastodon only rather than Lemmy, given Meta’s focus on being a Twitter alternative at the moment.

    I'm glad you mentioned this, because this seems like the most important point that seems to often get lost. This is primary a potential issue for Mastodon servers, not Lemmy/Kbin/etc.

    • Kbin's microblogging is basically msstodon so it would be affected.

      • Not only that, but the way Magazines work, you can access them via Mastodone, and Masto users can interact in threads just like lemmy users. There is a lot more integration with mastodon than many people realize.

    • It's still an issue for the Fediverse, and even the concept of free software, federated services as a whole.

      I said before - right now, Fediverse has momentum due to Twitter and Reddit blowing up. Threads is already taking some of that momentum away both in news articles and taking in potential Twitter/Reddit refugees.

      If they decide to fuck with Mastodon after people get used to Threads presence, they can leave the whole concept in pieces.

      • Threads is already taking some of that momentum away both in news articles and taking in potential Twitter/Reddit refugees.

        In both cases, the only ones who are running away and using Threads are those who can not handle Twitter's entertaining hell scape and normies who used Reddit. Whom also, already had an Instagram account, dormant or not, or in less percentage made a new one for the first time. Threads remains unavailable in Europe because it's incredibly invasive on privacy any how.

    • Kbin has a microblogging feature and that puts them at immediate risk. And if their one dude or however many people are on their development team can put together something that combines both, do we really think that we won't wake up to meta's new community feature a month or 2 from now?

  • Instance Blocking - Unlike Mastodon, Lemmy does not provide a feature for individual users to block an instance (yet).

    This is the real problem.

  • The fact that there's even anything to consider is pretty concerning. This is a company that has actively performed research on whether they can intentionally give people eating disorders.

    Just from a user safety point of view they have proven themselves to be entirely untrustworthy. And anyone even considering exposing their userbase to people like that is also entirely untrustworthy.

    • And anyone even considering exposing their userbase to people like that is also entirely untrustworthy.

      What does "exposing" mean in this context? If you mean Meta will be able to track everyone's data then they can do that already. The Fediverse by its very nature is open and public and me or you could write a scraper to catalogue all of the comments and threads.

      So Federating with Meta will not change this at all. In fact, I wouldn't be surprised if they're already working on some way to do this right now.

      If you mean "exposing" in the sense of introducing Instagram users to the general population of the Fediverse, then I think you are too harsh on Instagram users. They are just normal people. My mother and my girlfriend both have Instagram accounts - they don't go around spreading hate or whatever on Facebook.

      Meta absolutely is an evil company (just like every single other large company). But blocking off millions of people from using our open protocol just defeats the purpose of having it in the first place.

      Up until now, nobody has given a concrete mechanism by which federation with Meta will "EEE" the Fediverse. I've been asking for a few weeks now on here/kbin/mastodon and have gotten nothing. Even the admins of this instance in this here post asked the same question.

      Blocking Meta would be like blocking Gmail as an email server. You're just hamstringing your own email server - now it won't be able to communicate with large swathes of the population. It means the protocol will remain niche and eventually die out.

      If we want to spread our global revolution of decentralized and open source social media we need to make it the standard. And blocking Meta will essentially cut us off from ever doing that.

      • Exposing means exposing in the same sense that you don't put kids in a room with someone that's committed sexual offences against kids before. You don't put users that meta wants to manipulate in a room with meta then claim yourself to be responsible people that care about your users.

        Why the fuck is this hard to understand?

    • Your own article defeats your point.

      They didn't do any research to find out if they could do so intentionally, but realised from research that it was happening unintentionally, but that they could use some tools to affect how severe it would be, and then used those tools to make it less bad

      Like there's a link to the testimony transcript right there. Stop reading the fluff opinion and actually read the testimony.

      Meta has done a lot of shady stuff, you don't need to make up bullshit.

      • Your own article defeats your point.

        No it does not.

        They didn’t do any research to find out if they could do so intentionally

        Meta has done a lot of shady stuff, you don’t need to make up bullshit.

        Alright Nick Clegg maybe eat my ass and stop pretending it doesn't say it right fucking there:

        "Facebook knows that they are leading young users to anorexia content ... It's just like cigarettes. Teenagers don't have any self-regulation. We need to protect the kids,"

        "What's super tragic is Facebook's own research says as these young women begin to consume this eating disorder content, they get more and more depressed. It actually makes them use the app more.

        "They end up in this feedback cycle where they hate their bodies more and more."

        Jog the fuck on.

        EDIT: Why is every fucking comment in your history defending Meta? Literally 100% of your comment history is PR. Come the fuck on.

  • This is a balanced post, and it is very much appreciated. That being said, I am new to the Fediverse, and I finally found a viable replacement for Reddit that is less toxic (at the moment at least,) and where I can socialize. I only use Telegram and Lemmy now. This is all I have. I don't have friends in the real world. I appreciate your strategy, but you should think of how this influx of toxicity would affect people like me who have difficulties socializing and making new physical friends and maintaining those friendships.

  • Thank you for this post.

    My biggest worry is not privacy, I know lemmy doesn't store any personal info and whatever you post in public can be used by anyone (if you don't like it, you'd better off not posting at all on public forums).

    Big corporate controlled platforms are well known for botting/astroturfing/vote manipulation/propaganda on top of a huge amount of shitposting, they are dozens of millions, that could very easily overwhelm lemmy and kill it on a whim, from a content perspective, this is what worries me the most.

    I will trust you anyway to keep an eye on them and react quickly if necessary, like you proved you're capable of with the hacking situation.

    I understand your open policy, that's a good approach in general, but I hope lemmy devs will consider adding a function to allow users to block instances, because I really don't want to see facebook shit here.

  • Thanks for being clear in what goes on in the decision making. As long as you're making your decision with the user's safety and privacy in mind, then I trust you'll make the right decision if/when the time comes.

    Some points/concerns I'd like to bring up though:

    Embrace, extend, and extinguish (EEE) - The biggest concern I have with this is rather than people thinking of us as separate platforms, people will start to associate us as Threads. We basically become Threads but for nerds/the paranoid/weirdos to many people. And as Meta begins to use their resources to introduce features lacking in most fedi sites, we'll eventually be seen as "shitty threads". Then after relying on threads for traffic and content without developing our own community, Meta yanks the plug, everyone who's still here will have to choose to prop up what remains of the fediverse, or join their friends on Threads, and then we start to see a decline in usership. Granted, because Mastodon is more of the Twitter analogue, they are more in danger of this happening than us. But we still get participation from Mastodon via federation, and they can still see and interact with us in various ways. If you have every received a comment reply where someone responds with @username, they are likely responding from a masto-like instance (you see this a lot in kbin, which is a hybrid of mastodon's/lemmy's interface), and there's a good chance we could also get those interactions from Threads users too. Also, nothing's stopping Meta from making "Threads but reddit" later down the line, and presenting a more direct threat.

    Blocking Outgoing Federation - This is a little bit concerning that even if we do defederate, they will still be able to see us, and any interacting they attempt will have to be done from their end. I thought defederation would be a little more...secure. Like if people on threads decided to target communities on this instance, they could see everything we are doing, and then all they would have to do is sign up for lemmy, and commence. Basically all that would do is make us blind to anything happening on their end.

    Regardless of whether Lemmy or other fediverse sites decide to defederate from Threads, there are definitely a lot of security concerns that should be addressed before federation occurs. Giving mods the tools to do their jobs and protect their users should be top priority for the development staff.

    • Embrace, extend, and extinguish (EEE) - The biggest concern I have with this is rather than people thinking of us as separate platforms, people will start to associate us as Threads. We basically become Threads but for nerds/the paranoid/weirdos to many people.

      Isn't that already how people probably see Lemmy and Mastodon vs Reddit and Twitter/Threads, even without federation? How would federation change anything? If anything I think it would just make more people aware that Lemmy even exists.

      • Because the fediverse is separated from most mainstream sites, They have developed their own userbases and cultures seperate from those sites before migrations even began. These migrations were usually 50k to 100k users at most. A large surge sure, but not enough to overwhelm the communities that were already there. The people who came to the conclusion that these sites were basically shitty (mainstream site) have already left, while the onces who have adapted to and embraced the cultures of these sites remain.

        Now let's say a mainstream site merges with the fediverse, and that site has tens of millions of users compared to the hundreds of thousands of fediverse users. These sites are going to be overwhelmed. The userbase from the mainstream site is going to be more visible than from the other communities, and the culture from that site will influence and maybe even replace the those of the fediverse. People start to switch from the smaller fed site to the maistream site cause their friends are there, or the features are better, etc. Before long the federated site is dependent on the mainstream site for any engagement. Then they decide to pull support and defederate. Users who want to stay in contact with their friends or following from the main site have to switch, and the fediverse site shinks even faster.

        The Google Talk situation isn't even the only example this is SOP for many tech companies.

    • At the end of the day this is a public platform, you don't even need an account to browse here

      Your posts and comments can, will and are currently being collected and stored permanently legally or not by other organisations and advertisers

      It's not really a security issue, none of this is intended to be private you're posting publically to the internet

      Defederating is made to be a one way block on purpose, larger servers otherwise could essentially kill off any competition so easily if they could Defederate and stop any other instances from being able to view their content, forcing users to swap to the larger instance to still be able to view the most content

  • I don't have much of an opinion to add other than I wouldn't trust Meta even slightly -- but I do want to say that I appreciate this openness and thoughtfulness from the lemmy.world/mastodon.world admins.

  • Best way by far would be to implement user-side blocking for specific instances. I personally don't want to see the corporate cesspool that Threads will be. But others might. And the fediverse as a whole will profit from more users and more mainstream engagement.

    User-side blocking would combat the content-fragmentation problem and ads. Privacy is not really an issue (as already said: anyone can scrape your shit from anywhere anytime. If you don't want your personal data on the internet, then dont put it there)

    It also keeps the power to the people. Moderation by people in charge of instances is really important ofc. But the last thing I would want is for them to become people dictating user behavior (as it is with some Reddit moderators and subs). Thankfully that's not the case here, but if we could keep as many decisions as possible to the users, that would be great.

  • Thanks for highlighting the real issues.

    People that keep mindlessly talking about EEE are doing more disservice than Meta itself.

    Most people don't have a clear grasp of the technical concepts, keep talking about defederating something that doesn't exist yet, keep copy-pasting the same things over and over, and this slows the conversation about the fediverse philosophy, the real problems and the possible solutions.

    The fediverse is it's in infancy, this could be a great chance to find some of its underlying issues and make it more resilient and healthy.

    I despise seeing it wasted with mindless or disonformed copy-paste.

    Ironically, even that's exactly the kind of behavior people here hate in Meta's platforms, but they keep perpetuating it here themselves.

    • People are jumping on the EEE bandwagon because it's spooky, but they're forgetting that as cool as the Fediverse is, places like Mastadon and Lemmy aren't Meta's primary competitor, Twitter is.

      From my limited experience developing platforms, I'd guess that the only reason they're associated with the Fediverse at all is because ActivityPub was the fastest way to minimum viable product, and using an already available open standard means a lot less litigation from the elongated muskrat. It's not some long con, it was just the path of least resistance.

      • I have my own theory as to why - the Digital Markets Act in the EU: https://commission.europa.eu/strategy-and-policy/priorities-2019-2024/europe-fit-digital-age/digital-markets-act-ensuring-fair-and-open-digital-markets_en

        Examples of the “do’s” - Gatekeeper platforms will have to:

        • allow third parties to inter-operate with the gatekeeper’s own services in certain specific situations
        • allow their business users to access the data that they generate in their use of the gatekeeper’s platform
        • provide companies advertising on their platform with the tools and information necessary for advertisers and publishers to carry out their own independent verification of their advertisements hosted by the gatekeeper
        • allow their business users to promote their offer and conclude contracts with their customers outside the gatekeeper’s platform

        The interoperability is the big one. Since Threads isn't currently connected to the wider fediverse, that's probably one reason why they're not in the EU yet - because it's currently in violation of the Digital Markets Act. This also means that fears of "Embrace, Extend, Extinguish" are likely overblown. Extending ActivityPub without working in tandem with the standards authorities to ensure interoperability means that they'd be (once again) in violation of the DMA.

        I'm not saying Facebook is innocent. People actively say Facebook is malicious (not without cause, mind), but really - like all corporations - Facebook is self-serving. Facebook will always do the thing that is in their own best interest; they're sociopathic but not evil for evils' sake. And the DMA gives clear evidence that EEE is not in Facebook's best interest.

        Let me quickly quote selected sections of the act itself:

        The ability of end users to acquire content, subscriptions, features or other items outside the core platform services of the gatekeeper should not be undermined or restricted. In particular, a situation should be avoided whereby gatekeepers restrict end users from access to, and use of, such services via a software application running on their core platform service. For example, subscribers to online content purchased outside a software application, software application store or virtual assistant should not be prevented from accessing such online content on a software application on the core platform service of the gatekeeper simply because it was purchased outside such software application, software application store or virtual assistant.

        ...

        The lack of interoperability allows gatekeepers that provide number-independent interpersonal communications services to benefit from strong network effects, which contributes to the weakening of contestability. Furthermore, regardless of whether end users ‘multi-home’, gatekeepers often provide number-independent interpersonal communications services as part of their platform ecosystem, and this further exacerbates entry barriers for alternative providers of such services and increases costs for end users to switch. Without prejudice to Directive (EU) 2018/1972 of the European Parliament and of the Council (14) and, in particular, the conditions and procedures laid down in Article 61 thereof, gatekeepers should therefore ensure, free of charge and upon request, interoperability with certain basic functionalities of their number-independent interpersonal communications services that they provide to their own end users, to third-party providers of such services.

        Gatekeepers should ensure interoperability for third-party providers of number-independent interpersonal communications services that offer or intend to offer their number-independent interpersonal communications services to end users and business users in the Union. To facilitate the practical implementation of such interoperability, the gatekeeper concerned should be required to publish a reference offer laying down the technical details and general terms and conditions of interoperability with its number-independent interpersonal communications services. It should be possible for the Commission, if applicable, to consult the Body of European Regulators for Electronic Communications, in order to determine whether the technical details and the general terms and conditions published in the reference offer that the gatekeeper intends to implement or has implemented ensures compliance with this obligation.

        Simply:

        • Content should not be restricted to just your site
        • You need to allow third-party apps
        • You must publish your API publicly

        Failure to comply causes:

        • Initial fine of up to 10% of the company’s total worldwide annual turnover (or up to 20% in the event of repeated infringements)
        • Daily fine of up to 5% of the average daily turnover
        • Systemic infringements can cause the EU to break up the company entirely

        The law has teeth. It started to take effect in May, but there's a period of time before compliance is expected (likely we won't see much compliance until 2024). The route of least resistance for Facebook is to adopt ActivityPub and allow third-party ActivityPub apps like Fedilab to interface with Threads. They can't make changes to the protocol because then they won't be compliant with the Digital Markets Act. I wouldn't be surprised if Instagram and maybe even Facebook itself start to federate as well.

      • activitypub was the fastest way to a minimum viable product

        This really makes zero sense, considering that they launched without activitypub support and are only planning on adding it later.

  • Thanks for commenting on the issue, I appreciate the communication and it seems the community feels the same.

    @lwadmin@lemmy.world @michelleg@lemmy.world @ruud@lemmy.world can you let us know if you or any admins of lemmy.world took a meeting with meta or representatives of meta?

    @ruud@lemmy.world runs the 6th largest mastodon instance, and fosstodon instance admins (a smaller mastodon instance), were invited to an "off the record" meeting with Meta. The fosstodon admin, Kev, declined the meeting and notified their community about the correspondence going as far as to share screenshots.

    In the correspondence, the meta rep said they were reaching out to mastodon admins, so if fosstodon got an invite, logic would figure they'd invite the admin(s) of a larger instance whom also happen to admin the largest lemmy instance in the world (lemmy.world)

    I would love if the same level of transparency could occur here on lemmy.world

    Were you folks invited, did you take it? I would really appreciate knowing if the people who run this instance have any relationships, formal or otherwise, with meta. A lot of lemmy users are here on the fediverse to escape the reach of companies like Meta when it comes to their social media.

    Obviously no one is obligated to defederate from meta/threads when the time comes. But I would like to be informed.

    I think it's important to know. I personally would like to know, I would like to make informed decisions on which instance is my home on lemmy - but without all of the info, our decisions aren't fully informed, so I have low confidence making any decision at this point.

    Finally, I've posed similar questions before and have been accused by other users of wanting to attack lemmy admins if they did take a meeting, or for any reason at all. That could not be further from the truth. Online harassment is harassment, and is illegal in many jurisdictions. I don't wish any harm or ill towards anyone, including those who have different values or opinions than mine. Finally, I've always been cordial in my submissions on lemmy, I don't know what would make anyone think I'd start behaving differently now.

    I think these questions are important, and I intend to continue asking them until we have an answer, so that I can make a decision with confidence that I had sufficient information to do so.

    I hope that seems as reasonable as I feel it is, though I could be wrong, please feel free to respond with your thoughts. I appreciate the discourse.

    Thanks yall.

  • I'd prefer to nuke Threads from orbit; the very least we can do is defederate them.

  • I think it's important to defederate from threads as soon as humanly possible, their presence here will only bring us problems in the future, as has been shown by what happens when Big companies enter federated Spaces in the past (many people have already brought up Embrace Extend Extinguish already). Also like I've said before Meta has a really bad track record when it comes to their privacy and ethics policies, might not be in our best interest to welcome them into this family.

  • I'm here for Lemmy, not Facebook/Instagram/Threads. If that community integrates with this one, I will move to an instance that doesn't. It's not about ads or EEE or privacy for me, it's about belonging to a social media platform that isn't toxic. FB and Twitter are. Integration with these or other communities like them are harmful to this one.

  • I advise against even CONSIDERING a cooperation with META. That alone will make users think you are in it for the gains, that you can be baught. There is no value that META can bring to the Fediverse. And I hope in the future outgoing defederation will be possible too, like blocking certain instances from accessing our activity via the pub. But this request comes from Fediverse, and META will request other things from ActivityPub. They will seem to contribute while muddying the waters. They are a huge monster coming our way and we'd better start raising the walls.

  • It's great to see you address this and display good understanding of all the facets and why they are or aren't a problem.

    In particular, I appreciate that you recognize the issues with moderation and content monopolization that would most likely occur as a result of hundreds of millions of Threads users flooding the ecosystem.

    This is a little corner of the internet that people have flocked to for very specific reasons, either to specifically escape corporate control or to seek an environment that is less toxic than the alternative. This is a nascent community that is taking shape, slowly. Connecting it to one of the largest, loudest and most toxic social media actors at this crucial stage of building the identity of Lemmy sounds a lot like playing with fire.

    I think why many people feel so strongly about this matter is that we are dealing with a known quantity. From a corporate perspective, we know what Meta stands for and how they do business. We know they monetize outrage and seek to trap their users in parasitic feedback loops to drive engagement. We know they have no moral or legal scruples.

    The same can be said about userbase. This isn't an unknown group of people with an unfamiliar culture that - who knows, maybe they're kind and nice? These are people from Facebook and Instagram, probably supplemented by plenty from Twitter too with how that platform is doing. We already know the culture on those platforms, it's been shaped by the outrage centric monetization and (lack of) moderation.

    It's possible that not many of them will find their way over here, but in my brief time here I have already seen interactions with Mastodon users, both in comments and as posts on the All feed. Now imagine a platform with a thousand times more users than Mastodon. Yes, perhaps the tiger won't find its way in, but why leave the front door open and just pray it's docile?

    Still, I appreciate the transparent communication once again, and it seems these are issues you are aware of, so I trust that you'll make a good decision when the time comes.

    • @Coelacanth

      This is a little corner of the internet that people have flocked to for very specific reasons

      I think this sentence may be pivotal to understanding the arguments opposing or favouring federation with a Meta (or other large corporate) service.

      • Some people see the fediverse as consisting primarily of communities with a certain shared set of values. And for those people taking a moral stance against those parties (such as Meta) antithetical to those principles assumes primacy. By implication however (in my opinion), this limits the reach of the fediverse because, let's face it, 95% (random number but probably not too far off) of people in the wider world don't care about this stand. The fediverse's current userbase however has a much higher proportion of people who do care.
      • Other people see the fediverse as having the potential of being a widespread alternative to mainstream services such as reddit, twitter, youtube etc. They may share some of the same concerns about the dangers of centralised control (or else they wouldn't be here), but believe that the decentralised nature of the fediverse model is resilient enough to both accommodate corporate players while not being dependent on, or endangered by them.
  • I'm not a Lemmy.world user, but this a top-notch response.

    • Has meta shown itself to be a responsible force, or a profit-driven corporation that has lied to users in the past and values profit above all else?

      If we judge them by their past and present actions, we should not federated with them.

  • I'm not interested in the vast majority of Instagram content but that doesn't mean that an IG-based platform should be blocked because the vast majority of content is also inoffensive. The outlook that I could follow accounts from TV shows and comedians I like without logging into a dedicated service is exciting. Given that I'm pondering to move from another Mastodon instance to calckey.world, it's refreshing that the admin team does not cave to baseless hysteria (it's baseless because Threads doesn't federate with anything, yet, therefore any judgement of the effect on the Fediverse is not based on facts, especially when it comes from people like EU citizens for whom Threads isn't even available).

    Additionally, the inability of individuals to block an instance means we have to do what is best for the community.

    You could just file a feature request for Lemmy. 🤷 Chances are, given the influx of developers, that user-level instance blocking will be implemented before Threads adopts ActivityPub.

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