this post was submitted on 06 Jul 2023
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There's really no imminent threat with Meta and ActivityPub, as a standard.
As for Threads and Mastodon, the "threat" is mild. If Meta wants your data, they can get it without spinning up an entire social network. If the concern is that it's going to lower the quality of the content, well, there's probably some truth to that, but that would happen with popularity, regardless of which service became popular, and it's a problem solved by the block function.
data is not a problem, you should accept what you post publicly to be well... public
what most people are worried about is embrace extend and extinguish policy, if you haven't read it already here it is
Everyone on the fediverse knows about EEE at this point; it's mentioned in every other post haha
The dev behind Mastodon doesn't seem concerned. Why are you?
i don't like meta and everything they seem to touch with their greedy little fingers turns into a hollow husk of what it once was, if you want an example look at whatsapp
i like the fediverse and i think it has potential, i just don't want to see it ruined slowly but surely
WhatsApp is owned and fully controlled by Meta. The Fediverse is federated and that's the beauty of it. They can't control it
you are right but they can dictate standards because of their massive user base, i mean they have had 10 million sign ups in 7 hours. that is more than the entirety of mastodon.
perhaps a more suitable example would be google's adblock hostile attitude and how they can only do that because of their massive user base.
meta only cares about profit and i don't think any profit driven entity entering fediverse is a good thing.
Yeah, but if they do try to dictate standards, then react, defederate, that's all I'm saying. I just don't think we need to be proactive here, our tools to react are fast acting and simple.
If they do go for the dreaded Embrace, Extend, Extinguish method, then let's ride the benefits of "Embrace" and lose them when they move on to the next steps.
Look up the history of the dread Triple-E and count the number of people who said exactly what you just said here shortly before they got consigned to oblivion by it.
And I'm sure there are many cases where an attempted EEE failed, but that doesn't get documented in the history, because you only notice it when it is effective.
Meta isn't even entering the Lemmy space yet, they're entering the Mastodon space. They can hardly extend and extinguish Lemmy when they are just barely feature compatible to begin with. Yes it's all Fediverse, but it's pretty different.
The audience, use cases and purposes are different between Lemmy and Threads. At least for now. Consider defederating if that changes
The Mastodon Dev says it's not a concern because of brand recognition.
That's not a defense mechanism lol.
That's not an accurate summary.
Please could you provide a better summary then? I must have missed the point, because I'm genuinely not understanding how the fediverse is EEE-resistant.
Lots of devs are foolish/naive, Eugen is just one of many to fit this bill.
Being smart at coding doesn't automatically make you smart at anything except, possibly, coding^1^. Eugen is young and is being more than just a little naive here. He hasn't seen well-intentioned people get played for suckers enough times to make the pattern match on "bad actors do bad things, no matter what their pretty words".
^1^ Why "possibly" here? Because "coding" is a far larger field than people understand—including coders.
During the short time Google also acquired users, who moved from other XMPP software because...well, the software was more integrated with other stuff. So when you then defederate, the rest is left with less users and a terrible experience.
Google did the same with Chrome and the web standards too. Look at the browser competition nowadays...