Do people actually appreciate URL shorteners?
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@hpod16 Yes, in some circumstances: if I trust the shortening service and it’s a printed URL (for inside, on a flyer) that I’ll have to type.
@hpod16 for instance, not for inside. Sheesh.
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Do people actually appreciate URL shorteners?
@hpod16 The only purpose or value I can see to them is when one has to manually type something in. But there are usually better ways of handling even that. (For example, QR codes so you don't have to type in the first place.) If I need to pass a complex URL over to my phone or something I usually paste it into a QR code generator and uncover the camera.
(As a side note, there are QR code apps that can show the URL before actually loading it and I do appreciate that.)
A lot of people here already know this, but of course URL shorteners can go bad and even URLs get taken over...
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@xyhhx @catsalad @paveljanicek @hpod16 the only legit shortener is one that block you anf force you to install an adblocker before you get redirected to the actual pagr. Redirection is immediate if an adblocker is detected
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Do people actually appreciate URL shorteners?
@hpod16
Only if generating a qr code -
Do people actually appreciate URL shorteners?
@hpod16 Then again, you're asking on the Fediverse. Your sample is already skewed towards IT-savvy weirdos. This might be very different on some sides of Instagram.
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@hpod16 Then again, you're asking on the Fediverse. Your sample is already skewed towards IT-savvy weirdos. This might be very different on some sides of Instagram.
@Civil_lights
True, but on Instagram you basically cannot share links. I want to know specifically what the Mastodon audience appreciates
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Do people actually appreciate URL shorteners?
I think URL shorteners are (speaking as someone who professionally manages TLS intercept proxies):
1) a security risk - to your point - because they obfuscate the true destination. further, some URL shorteners, even today in 2026, do not use TLS - meaning network adversaries can trivially inject new behavior.
2) a privacy risk - because shorteners are almost always designed to track clicks to companies selling data likely in breach of GDPR. Usually the forwards include multiple domain changes meaning multiple third-parties are extracting tracking data to potentially thousands of data brokers. and again, some URL shorteners, even today in 2026, do not use TLS - meaning even ISPs can see the full URL, meaning more pathways to more data brokers.
3) unnecessary. Since, idk, 2010? social media companies like Twitter auto-shortening any link to a maximum size in a way that massively long links dont count towards max character limits.
4) something that should be "against the law" on the fediverse for the above 3 reasons, and is even worth soemthing blocking accounts for doing.
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@hpod16 I only click if the URL is from the company, institution, or person sharing them. The ones I share with my audience are always created with my domain.
@vladcampos
It’s kind of similar for the organisation I work for. We have our own shortener, that can only shorten links from the Europa.EU domain… -
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