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  3. Jack Dorsey skipped ActivityPub, built AtProto, lost Twitter, funded Bluesky, watched it become a company with VCs and a board, said it was "repeating all the mistakes," left, and now funds Nostr.

Jack Dorsey skipped ActivityPub, built AtProto, lost Twitter, funded Bluesky, watched it become a company with VCs and a board, said it was "repeating all the mistakes," left, and now funds Nostr.

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  • Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»

    @mastodonmigration @baralheia if an independent element decides to not cooperate, you just route around. Sure, you may have a temporary outage, but it's manageable.

    For example, a popular labeler for pronouns on bluesky went offline the other day. Within 24 hours, Blacksky had shipped native pronouns support within their social app.

    Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T This user is from outside of this forum
    Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T This user is from outside of this forum
    Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»
    wrote last edited by
    #125

    @mastodonmigration @baralheia Is it really decentralized if, for most people, their identity (i.e., handle) is tied to a domain that they don't control (because they don't want to operate social apps, they just want to use them), and migrating from one provider to another looses all their data apart from their follow graph (which still looses some data)

    (sure, LOLA might help with this, maybe, but it's just a technical demo right now)

    Mastodon MigrationM 2 Replies Last reply
    0
    • Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»

      @mastodonmigration @baralheia if an independent element decides to not cooperate, you just route around. Sure, you may have a temporary outage, but it's manageable.

      For example, a popular labeler for pronouns on bluesky went offline the other day. Within 24 hours, Blacksky had shipped native pronouns support within their social app.

      Mastodon MigrationM This user is from outside of this forum
      Mastodon MigrationM This user is from outside of this forum
      Mastodon Migration
      wrote last edited by
      #126

      @thisismissem @baralheia

      Seems like we are losing focus here. If the model is one principly centralized platform where satellites offload and contribute resources many interesting things are possible, and it may be a more fun and interesting development environment, but it is still dependent on the centralized platform.

      Real decentralization is hard, but the advantage is true node independence. If real decentralization is not the operative model, then it should not be the marketing slogan.

      Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»

        @mastodonmigration @baralheia Is it really decentralized if, for most people, their identity (i.e., handle) is tied to a domain that they don't control (because they don't want to operate social apps, they just want to use them), and migrating from one provider to another looses all their data apart from their follow graph (which still looses some data)

        (sure, LOLA might help with this, maybe, but it's just a technical demo right now)

        Mastodon MigrationM This user is from outside of this forum
        Mastodon MigrationM This user is from outside of this forum
        Mastodon Migration
        wrote last edited by
        #127

        @thisismissem @baralheia

        Short answer is yes. Decentralization has nothing to do with keeping some universal identifier or address. In fact, keeping a universal handle is kind of a centralized concept since some central authority must adjudicate the name.

        Baral'heia Stormdancer Ξ˜Ξ”πŸ²B 1 Reply Last reply
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        • Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»

          @mastodonmigration @baralheia @cwebber no, I mean, processing 2.4 billion posts, 3.4 billion follows, and 13.6 billion likes is a metric shittone of data to process. Serving up feeds to 42 million users (10-15 million monthly active) requires a lot of processing.

          Stats from: https://bsky.jazco.dev/stats

          It's not even talking about communication at a network layer between PDSes, Relays, and AppViews. That's a different matter, which is where Christine was mostly talking, iirc.

          Stefan BohacekS This user is from outside of this forum
          Stefan BohacekS This user is from outside of this forum
          Stefan Bohacek
          wrote last edited by
          #128

          @thisismissem I'm sorry, where is the MAU from? I don't see it on the page you linked to.

          https://bluefacts.app/bluesky-user-growth reports 5.36M (excluding users who don't interact with posts).

          Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T 1 Reply Last reply
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          • Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»

            @mastodonmigration @baralheia Is it really decentralized if, for most people, their identity (i.e., handle) is tied to a domain that they don't control (because they don't want to operate social apps, they just want to use them), and migrating from one provider to another looses all their data apart from their follow graph (which still looses some data)

            (sure, LOLA might help with this, maybe, but it's just a technical demo right now)

            Mastodon MigrationM This user is from outside of this forum
            Mastodon MigrationM This user is from outside of this forum
            Mastodon Migration
            wrote last edited by
            #129

            @thisismissem @baralheia

            Want to thank you again for having this discussion. Fully recognize that what AT Proto folks prioritize in network architecture are not the same capabilities that ActivityPub boosters prioritize, and that it is frustrating to have this conversation here. Feel like we did make progress in clarifying and kind of agreeing about some of the respective characteristics of each protocol.

            Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • Mastodon MigrationM Mastodon Migration

              @thisismissem @baralheia

              Seems like we are losing focus here. If the model is one principly centralized platform where satellites offload and contribute resources many interesting things are possible, and it may be a more fun and interesting development environment, but it is still dependent on the centralized platform.

              Real decentralization is hard, but the advantage is true node independence. If real decentralization is not the operative model, then it should not be the marketing slogan.

              Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T This user is from outside of this forum
              Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T This user is from outside of this forum
              Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»
              wrote last edited by
              #130

              @mastodonmigration @baralheia AT Protocol is decentralised in that you can run the parts yourself, if you *really* want to, but you don't *need* to.

              Needing to run everything yourself has a massive cost associated with it, and relies on a tonne of volunteer labour to provide infrastructure, moderation, etc.

              Just because we *choose* to share resources, does not make it centralised. We can also *choose* to not share resources, which is what Blacksky has done for microblogging on AT Protocol. They have features Bluesky doesn't have. They run completely independently at all levels of infrastructure*.

              There is an * here, because they are currently choosing to consume the Bluesky Moderation Service's data alongside with their own moderation service, because that provides significant value to them at this time (I'm assuming that's the reason)

              Decentralisation doesn't mean I need to host everything myself. It means I can if I want to.

              We'd all say Email is a pretty decentralised network, even though majority of people are with like four different dominant providers. ActivityPub is generally equated to email in a lot of explanations.

              "Real decentralisation" isn't a thing people – normal people – want nor care about. They want better social apps that don't lock them in. They don't care about servers, federation, message passing, blah blah blah.

              Sure, you can focus on "how hard is it to run the entire network by yourself on a raspberry pi" and for majority of people that is impossible. Sure, they could learn, but it's just not something that they *want* to learn typically.

              Mastodon MigrationM 1 Reply Last reply
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              • Stefan BohacekS Stefan Bohacek

                @thisismissem I'm sorry, where is the MAU from? I don't see it on the page you linked to.

                https://bluefacts.app/bluesky-user-growth reports 5.36M (excluding users who don't interact with posts).

                Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T This user is from outside of this forum
                Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T This user is from outside of this forum
                Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»
                wrote last edited by
                #131

                @stefan it comes from @laurenshof.

                Laurens HofL 1 Reply Last reply
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                • Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»

                  @mastodonmigration @baralheia AT Protocol is decentralised in that you can run the parts yourself, if you *really* want to, but you don't *need* to.

                  Needing to run everything yourself has a massive cost associated with it, and relies on a tonne of volunteer labour to provide infrastructure, moderation, etc.

                  Just because we *choose* to share resources, does not make it centralised. We can also *choose* to not share resources, which is what Blacksky has done for microblogging on AT Protocol. They have features Bluesky doesn't have. They run completely independently at all levels of infrastructure*.

                  There is an * here, because they are currently choosing to consume the Bluesky Moderation Service's data alongside with their own moderation service, because that provides significant value to them at this time (I'm assuming that's the reason)

                  Decentralisation doesn't mean I need to host everything myself. It means I can if I want to.

                  We'd all say Email is a pretty decentralised network, even though majority of people are with like four different dominant providers. ActivityPub is generally equated to email in a lot of explanations.

                  "Real decentralisation" isn't a thing people – normal people – want nor care about. They want better social apps that don't lock them in. They don't care about servers, federation, message passing, blah blah blah.

                  Sure, you can focus on "how hard is it to run the entire network by yourself on a raspberry pi" and for majority of people that is impossible. Sure, they could learn, but it's just not something that they *want* to learn typically.

                  Mastodon MigrationM This user is from outside of this forum
                  Mastodon MigrationM This user is from outside of this forum
                  Mastodon Migration
                  wrote last edited by
                  #132

                  @thisismissem @baralheia

                  Fair enough. Would just add that a key characteristic of a protocol is the 'cost' of 'running everything by yourself.' If that cost is very high then there is a significant barrier to real in practice decentralization. Alternately, network protocols with a lower independent node cost will achieve effective decentralization more rapidly and with greater distribution.

                  Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T 1 Reply Last reply
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                  • Mastodon MigrationM Mastodon Migration

                    @thisismissem @baralheia

                    Want to thank you again for having this discussion. Fully recognize that what AT Proto folks prioritize in network architecture are not the same capabilities that ActivityPub boosters prioritize, and that it is frustrating to have this conversation here. Feel like we did make progress in clarifying and kind of agreeing about some of the respective characteristics of each protocol.

                    Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T This user is from outside of this forum
                    Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T This user is from outside of this forum
                    Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»
                    wrote last edited by
                    #133

                    @mastodonmigration @baralheia the root argument here is that none of us are actually fighting each other, as Bluesky grows, so does the fediverse. We're fighting the big tech companies like Meta, Google and TikTok.

                    Fighting which decentralisation or social protocol is better doesn't serve anyone on any protocol. It just strokes egos and makes tribalism feel good.

                    I regularly see posts on the fediverse that are trying to fight AT Protocol. I never see the same from the AT Protocol developer community back at ActivityPub: we've recognised that fight is frankly not serving anyone.

                    People don't care about protocols. Ain't no one going "ewww, you use IMAP? That's so lame, you should use JMAP" because no one cares. They care about what features their email app has and if it sends emails and receives them. Maybe they care about data being hosted in EU vs US, maybe.

                    Mastodon MigrationM 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • Mastodon MigrationM Mastodon Migration

                      @thisismissem @baralheia

                      Fair enough. Would just add that a key characteristic of a protocol is the 'cost' of 'running everything by yourself.' If that cost is very high then there is a significant barrier to real in practice decentralization. Alternately, network protocols with a lower independent node cost will achieve effective decentralization more rapidly and with greater distribution.

                      Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T This user is from outside of this forum
                      Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T This user is from outside of this forum
                      Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»
                      wrote last edited by
                      #134

                      @mastodonmigration @baralheia well, like I said before, no one has to run an AppView for 42 million people. It's a choice. There's a way to interact with the protocol and be social without needing to do that. Konbini, Red dwarf, etc all provide alternatives.

                      1 Reply Last reply
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                      • Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»

                        @mastodonmigration @baralheia the root argument here is that none of us are actually fighting each other, as Bluesky grows, so does the fediverse. We're fighting the big tech companies like Meta, Google and TikTok.

                        Fighting which decentralisation or social protocol is better doesn't serve anyone on any protocol. It just strokes egos and makes tribalism feel good.

                        I regularly see posts on the fediverse that are trying to fight AT Protocol. I never see the same from the AT Protocol developer community back at ActivityPub: we've recognised that fight is frankly not serving anyone.

                        People don't care about protocols. Ain't no one going "ewww, you use IMAP? That's so lame, you should use JMAP" because no one cares. They care about what features their email app has and if it sends emails and receives them. Maybe they care about data being hosted in EU vs US, maybe.

                        Mastodon MigrationM This user is from outside of this forum
                        Mastodon MigrationM This user is from outside of this forum
                        Mastodon Migration
                        wrote last edited by
                        #135

                        @thisismissem @baralheia

                        Honestly, it has nothing to do with fighting each other. The concern is the continued dependence of AT Proto on Bluesky PBC, and what happens if the management of the company asserts an agenda. But, that is a discussion for another forum.

                        Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T skarnioS Tim BrayT 3 Replies Last reply
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                        • Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»

                          @mastodonmigration @baralheia @cwebber well, that's the thing: the network topology does not match that.

                          Sure, I could run a relay and an appview and a PDS if I really wanted to, but I don't *need* to.

                          That's where folks are stumbling because they think they *need* to run the entire network topology or stack, which just doesn't make a whole lot of sense for individuals to do.

                          Instead we pool resources and work together. It's kinda like how there's been the ideas in the ActivityPub ecosystem for ages for a shared media CDN and a shared link resolver for link previews, and even shared moderation infrastructure.

                          Running everything gets complicated and expensive as the network grows, whether that's AT Protocol or ActivityPub.

                          Baral'heia Stormdancer Ξ˜Ξ”πŸ²B This user is from outside of this forum
                          Baral'heia Stormdancer Ξ˜Ξ”πŸ²B This user is from outside of this forum
                          Baral'heia Stormdancer Ξ˜Ξ”πŸ²
                          wrote last edited by
                          #136

                          @thisismissem @mastodonmigration @cwebber Personally, I don't agree. I'm not at all saying that pooling resources is bad - far from it, actually, because every instance on the Fediverse both large and small is a shared resource (excluding those that are single-user instances, naturally) - but I also think it's vitally important that the network is built with the expectation that individuals CAN and SHOULD be able to own their own *full* slice of the pie, do so easily and cheaply, and be able to expect to have a reasonably similar user experience (even if it's not a global view). US and global politics being what they are right now, combined with seeing how Twitter enshittified the way it did, it is *massively* important to me that my social network is difficult to manipulate or control. 12 relays are much easier to exert some level of control over vs 43k+ active servers in the Fediverse (https://fedidb.com). Same goes for the independent appviews, however many of those are out there. I may technically have choice, but the limited number of relays and AppViews that are fully independent from Bsky is still a liability - and the current architecture makes it more difficult for an individual to manage.

                          Meanwhile, if I need to have full control over my stack in the Fediverse, all I gotta do is set up a server and throw Mastodon on it. Boom, done. I'm running fully independently now. The only external dependencies would be on the instances hosting the accounts I wish to follow. Hell I could even run this on some really limited hardware and still have a reasonably cromulent user experience.

                          The idea is not necessarily that such a setup should be the default - but that it should be easily possible when desired or necessary. Make the components of the network so easy and cheap to stand up yourself that it becomes supremely resilient in the face of hostile actors - anyone can stand one up with a minimum of resources. That ease of hosting also makes it easy and fun to play with and hack on and innovate from.

                          Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • Mastodon MigrationM Mastodon Migration

                            @thisismissem @baralheia

                            Honestly, it has nothing to do with fighting each other. The concern is the continued dependence of AT Proto on Bluesky PBC, and what happens if the management of the company asserts an agenda. But, that is a discussion for another forum.

                            Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T This user is from outside of this forum
                            Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T This user is from outside of this forum
                            Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»
                            wrote last edited by
                            #137

                            @mastodonmigration @baralheia right, like, for instance, the IETF where protocol development is moving to, as we're in the final stages of setting up a working group there: https://datatracker.ietf.org/wg/atp/about/

                            There's plenty of people building in the protocol who don't use anything related to Bluesky (none of their code, alternative relays, etc).

                            Bluesky PBC has designed the protocol and its layers to prevent Bluesky PBC from asserting anything over the whole network.

                            Though, Mastodon, whew, they asserted webfinger on everyone in ActivityPub.

                            1 Reply Last reply
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                            • Mastodon MigrationM Mastodon Migration

                              @thisismissem @baralheia

                              Short answer is yes. Decentralization has nothing to do with keeping some universal identifier or address. In fact, keeping a universal handle is kind of a centralized concept since some central authority must adjudicate the name.

                              Baral'heia Stormdancer Ξ˜Ξ”πŸ²B This user is from outside of this forum
                              Baral'heia Stormdancer Ξ˜Ξ”πŸ²B This user is from outside of this forum
                              Baral'heia Stormdancer Ξ˜Ξ”πŸ²
                              wrote last edited by
                              #138

                              @mastodonmigration @thisismissem Agreed with this for the most part, though I would say that the containerized identity concept is something I do actually really like about ATproto. There's been some work to bring this to ActivityPub via the ActivityPods proposal, and I hope that continues. But identity portability in the same manner as ATproto is not necessary for decentralization in my personal opinion. It's more about making it simple for anyone to participate in the network, so even if there is a dominant player and they suddenly disappear into the ether the network still can carry on without them.

                              1 Reply Last reply
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                              • Baral'heia Stormdancer Ξ˜Ξ”πŸ²B Baral'heia Stormdancer Ξ˜Ξ”πŸ²

                                @thisismissem @mastodonmigration @cwebber Personally, I don't agree. I'm not at all saying that pooling resources is bad - far from it, actually, because every instance on the Fediverse both large and small is a shared resource (excluding those that are single-user instances, naturally) - but I also think it's vitally important that the network is built with the expectation that individuals CAN and SHOULD be able to own their own *full* slice of the pie, do so easily and cheaply, and be able to expect to have a reasonably similar user experience (even if it's not a global view). US and global politics being what they are right now, combined with seeing how Twitter enshittified the way it did, it is *massively* important to me that my social network is difficult to manipulate or control. 12 relays are much easier to exert some level of control over vs 43k+ active servers in the Fediverse (https://fedidb.com). Same goes for the independent appviews, however many of those are out there. I may technically have choice, but the limited number of relays and AppViews that are fully independent from Bsky is still a liability - and the current architecture makes it more difficult for an individual to manage.

                                Meanwhile, if I need to have full control over my stack in the Fediverse, all I gotta do is set up a server and throw Mastodon on it. Boom, done. I'm running fully independently now. The only external dependencies would be on the instances hosting the accounts I wish to follow. Hell I could even run this on some really limited hardware and still have a reasonably cromulent user experience.

                                The idea is not necessarily that such a setup should be the default - but that it should be easily possible when desired or necessary. Make the components of the network so easy and cheap to stand up yourself that it becomes supremely resilient in the face of hostile actors - anyone can stand one up with a minimum of resources. That ease of hosting also makes it easy and fun to play with and hack on and innovate from.

                                Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T This user is from outside of this forum
                                Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T This user is from outside of this forum
                                Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»
                                wrote last edited by
                                #139

                                @baralheia @mastodonmigration that's the thing: we're comparing apples to oranges.

                                Yes, it is expensive and complicated to run an entire appview for 42 million users and process billions of records/events. Just like it's expensive to run hachyderm or mastodon.social (granted they're perhaps cheaper because they're a hundredth the size)

                                You're comparing your mastodon server which does a slice of a pie, with a bluesky appview that does the entire fucking pie, where your slice is less than 10% of the network.

                                Of course that is different. Anyone can see that's different, I would hope.

                                Like I've repeatedly said: you can run the whole pie if you want to, but you don't need to, and in fact, some people have decided that they want to, like Blacksky, and Eurosky (but they're not there yet)

                                The number of relays can always grow. The number of PDSes can always grow. Same with the number of independent app views. I have my own appview, but it doesn't do microblogging or bluesky stuff, because that's not what my app is about.

                                When 43k+ servers are 71.1% Mastodon and 11% Pixelfed (by active accounts), or ~30% each Wordpress and Ghost and 20% Mastodon by number of servers, are you really in full control? Sure, you can operate the software, but is that really "control"?

                                The "control" we say we have only makes us "feel good", if mastodon.social decided to defederate from you, would your Mastodon experience be the same? (you wouldn't have been able to see a significant part of this conversation, since they run mastodon.online too)

                                AT Protocol can scale down too: https://bsky.bad-example.com/can-atproto-scale-down/

                                The components of AT Protocol are cheap to run, PDSes and Relays both run on commodity hardware. It's the full-network aware AppView that is a specialized piece of software, but even without that you can still interact with the network, see Red Dwarf: https://reddwarf.app/

                                I guarantee you there are way more people hacking with AT Protocol than ActivityPub-based systems. The Mastodon codebase is a beast to understand fully, and I say that as someone who has been a regular contributor (100+ pull requests merged)

                                Baral'heia Stormdancer Ξ˜Ξ”πŸ²B 1 Reply Last reply
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                                • Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»

                                  @mastodonmigration @baralheia decentralized *where* and *how*

                                  Is ActivityPub really decentralized when everyone builds for compatibility with Mastodon (apart from Lemmy) or is it only decentralized in operations? Where mastodon.social accounts for a significant portion of the network? What about Pixelfed? How much decentralization there? Loops? I think there's only really one maybe two loops servers of any size?

                                  Decentralization doesn't mean "run absolutely everything myself", I mean, sure, you *could* but that's expensive, complicated, and time consuming. Moderation? Most servers just import some blocklist snapshot at a given point in time.

                                  Thing is, decentralization isn't the goal, the goal is better social apps.

                                  Decentralization focuses on technology, not people. It's the "how" not the "why" and "for who"

                                  CyC This user is from outside of this forum
                                  CyC This user is from outside of this forum
                                  Cy
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #140
                                  Decentralization isn't supposed to make things easier for the people using it. It's not supposed to be a better social "app." That's not the point. The whole reason for decentralization is to prevent admin abuse. You put up with a little more hassle as a user, and when the admin sells you out to Nazis, you'll be ready to adapt. Then sellouts don't take over the network, and nobody gets their elections rigged in favor of some tyrannical monster, or whatever.

                                  Criticizing Activitypub for having an optional server that has too many people on it is fine, but you can't equate that to a network run by crummy venture capitalists who worked for Twitter, that won't function without permission from one central authority.

                                  CC: @mastodonmigration@mastodon.online @baralheia@dragonchat.org
                                  Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T Kuba Suder β€’ @mackuba.eu on πŸ¦‹M 2 Replies Last reply
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                                  • rainynight65R This user is from outside of this forum
                                    rainynight65R This user is from outside of this forum
                                    rainynight65
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #141

                                    @dansup It's important to note that Dorsey left BlueSky when Bluesky introduced content moderation. That's what he meant by 'repeating all the mistakes'.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • Maho 🦝🍻M Maho 🦝🍻

                                      @alexchapman @quillmatiq @evan @dansup @HolosSocial

                                      and it has implications on innovation.

                                      We/I could build a LinkedIn (when LinkedIn was good) version for the fediverse.

                                      A nice professional UI fediverse-client that shows indexed #jobs posts, adding @badgefed / certifications celebrations, and some #lemmy forums on specific companies and job market. But I am afraid that simply indexing (even if done in the "right and respectful" way), would get a drawback.

                                      richardF This user is from outside of this forum
                                      richardF This user is from outside of this forum
                                      richard
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #142

                                      Couldn't it be done with a mastodon server specifically for jobs on the back end with a front end reworked to LinkedIn?

                                      1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • CyC Cy
                                        Decentralization isn't supposed to make things easier for the people using it. It's not supposed to be a better social "app." That's not the point. The whole reason for decentralization is to prevent admin abuse. You put up with a little more hassle as a user, and when the admin sells you out to Nazis, you'll be ready to adapt. Then sellouts don't take over the network, and nobody gets their elections rigged in favor of some tyrannical monster, or whatever.

                                        Criticizing Activitypub for having an optional server that has too many people on it is fine, but you can't equate that to a network run by crummy venture capitalists who worked for Twitter, that won't function without permission from one central authority.

                                        CC: @mastodonmigration@mastodon.online @baralheia@dragonchat.org
                                        Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T This user is from outside of this forum
                                        Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T This user is from outside of this forum
                                        Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #143

                                        @cy @mastodonmigration @baralheia you have no idea how close to a sell out that almost happened we came, and how it would've affected a significant portion of the fediverse.

                                        They hid that from you.

                                        AT Protocol does and will function without a central authority. Sure, we all use did:plc for identity pretty much, because it's a good trade-off for most people. But did:web is also supported, and the working group at IETF specifically is chartered to allow new DID methods to become part of the network.

                                        Can you use ActivityPub without Webfinger support? That's something Mastodon forced on the network, and everyone else had to adopt if they wanted to federate with Mastodon.

                                        (Hint: you can't choose *not* to do Webfinger with ActivityPub, because you won't be able to interoperate with most of the network which requires webfinger).

                                        Edit: Also, Dan posts almost too frequently about *not* selling out, which is mildly disconcerting.

                                        CyC 1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»

                                          @cy @mastodonmigration @baralheia you have no idea how close to a sell out that almost happened we came, and how it would've affected a significant portion of the fediverse.

                                          They hid that from you.

                                          AT Protocol does and will function without a central authority. Sure, we all use did:plc for identity pretty much, because it's a good trade-off for most people. But did:web is also supported, and the working group at IETF specifically is chartered to allow new DID methods to become part of the network.

                                          Can you use ActivityPub without Webfinger support? That's something Mastodon forced on the network, and everyone else had to adopt if they wanted to federate with Mastodon.

                                          (Hint: you can't choose *not* to do Webfinger with ActivityPub, because you won't be able to interoperate with most of the network which requires webfinger).

                                          Edit: Also, Dan posts almost too frequently about *not* selling out, which is mildly disconcerting.

                                          CyC This user is from outside of this forum
                                          CyC This user is from outside of this forum
                                          Cy
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #144
                                          Yeah, but webfinger is just responding to certain URIs on the same server that your instance is, and it really isn't necessary for anything other than resolving the email-y Twitterlike mentions to APIDs. It's not like there's some central webfinger server that every one must finger.

                                          CC: @mastodonmigration@mastodon.online @baralheia@dragonchat.org
                                          Emelia πŸ‘ΈπŸ»T 1 Reply Last reply
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