Threads seems to be beginning to test ActivityPub federation, and since Kbin can be used for microblogging, this affects kbin.social. What are your thoughts on federating or defederating with them?

  • FaceDeer@kbin.social
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    11 months ago

    And if Meta tries to pull some sort of destructive shenanigans, sure, then defederate from them. Not because they’re Meta, but because they’re pulling destructive shenanigans. There’s already plenty of instances that get defederated for that sort of thing.

    That’s not what I’m annoyed about here, though. I’m annoyed by all the people who have come to the Fediverse claiming that it’s because it’s open and free and all that, and then when some company that they have a particular personal dislike for comes along and wants to participate in the protocol exactly as intended they go “but not like that!

    If some random instance like lemmy.ca (name picked randomly) was to find itself in financial difficulty keeping the lights on and was to strike some kind of deal with an advertiser to put banner ads on their site, would there be a similar enormous hue and cry about it? Maybe users on lemmy.ca who have to actually deal with the advertising might raise a ruckus, but over here on kbin.social it wouldn’t affect me in the slightest.

    • CoffeeAddict@kbin.social
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      11 months ago

      And if Meta tries to pull some sort of destructive shenanigans, sure, then defederate from them. Not because they’re Meta, but because they’re pulling destructive shenanigans. There’s already plenty of instances that get defederated for that sort of thing.

      In principle, I agree.

      My fear is that the fediverse has no big hitter that can compete with Meta’s resources. The closest thing would be Mastodon.social, and they are still tiny compared to the two-billion instagram users Meta is gonna advertise Threads to and the 390 million Twitter X users that they are trying to poach.

      I think Meta will play nice in the beginning, but eventually (perhaps even quickly) will gain a much larger userbase than everyone else. From there, it is only a matter of time before their users create more communities and content than everyone else.

      Eventually, anyone who is federated with Threads is going to get accustomed to seeing and enjoying Threads content (why wouldn’t they? It’s from people.) That is where I fear Meta will start to flex their muscles because at the end of the day their business model is based on selling user data to advertisers; having users being able to interact from other platforms doesn’t really fit into that as well as having everyone be on your platform.

      Obviously, I don’t have a crystal ball and all of this is theoretical, but I can see something like this happening where people start to abandon smaller platforms for Threads because their preferred platform got defederated.

    • livus@kbin.social
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      11 months ago

      This is the sticking point for me:

      wants to participate in the protocol exactly as intended

      I don’t think they want to participate in the protocol as intended at all. I think they want to gradually warp Activity Pub for their own ends.

      This isn’t about liking or disliking, it’s about inferring future behaviour based on past patterns. That company has an abominable history. It actively impeded an international genocide trial (after it spent years facilitating the genocide).

      When that’s the kind of level they can stoop to I think it’s madness to engage with them and expect good faith. The secret meetings haven’t helped.

      • FaceDeer@kbin.social
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        11 months ago

        I don’t think they want to participate in the protocol as intended at all. I think they want to gradually warp Activity Pub for their own ends.

        If they do then that would be a reason to defederate.

        All I’m arguing is that it’s silly to defederate before they do that, because they might not.

        • livus@kbin.social
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          11 months ago

          A wild polar bear might not bite me if I pat it either.

          Personally it doesn’t seem preemptive to me because I think the part where Meta held secret meetings with certain Fediverse admins and made them sign NDAs was a clear indication of the way they are going to do things, i.e nontransparent and not as equals.

          Perfect conditions for embrace extend extinguish, which is boiling a frog so could do a lot of damage before most people are able to spot it.

          I accept that YMMV though, I just don’t think it’s particularly closed-minded of those of us who are too wary of their motives to want to federate with them.

    • kglitch@kglitch.social
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      11 months ago

      Meta has already pulled plenty of destructive shenanigans. What makes you think this time will be different?

      • FaceDeer@kbin.social
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        11 months ago

        That they have not yet done so.

        It’s not hard to defederate. It’s a simple, easy lever to pull. All I’m saying is that it’s silly to pull it preemtptively. Meta might do something destructive, but if it doesn’t then defederating preemptively is a huge waste of an opportunity.