cross-posted from: https://sh.itjust.works/post/181146
I am assuming many of you have heard about the potential of Meta creating an ActivityPub enabled client (TheVerge, PCMag etc. have made articles). I was just wondering what people’s thoughts are on this, and if it came down to it should instances in the fediverse defederate from it considering it could be a case of Embrace, extend, extinguish.
There’s a DefederateMeta magazine at !DefederateMeta@fedia.io if you’re interested, which includes an anti-meta pact on cryptpad with the responses viewable on a seperate website if you care to see which instance admins have agreed.
I’m just curious what my fellow sh.it.heads think of this development in the fediverse, any input is appreciated!
Reposting at the request of can, within the context of c/agora should this instance defederate from any future Meta activity pub enabled clients? From my understanding it is more so a Twitter-clone and I’d argue a more severe problem for Kbin / Mastodon, but it is still worth discussing here.
I would agree that de-federation could work to slow them if there was a way to ensure that there was 100% compliance. I just don’t see having anywhere near that level of compliance with a Meta blockade. Many instances are going to federate with them simply for the traffic.
On paper it sounds good, but the actual implementation will be incredibly spotty. It will create a fragmented Fediverse where people have to pick and choose which islands they want to live on and the Network Effect will drive a huge amount of people to choosing the island that Meta is on which will starve the other islands of users.
The people who feel so strongly anti-Meta (and I am one of them) need to be able to directly compete with them. We’re not benefiting anybody by creating a tiny Fediverse island of idealists while Meta takes over the rest of the Fediverse.
My stance on de-federation has been pretty clear I think. I just don’t think it is a tool to be used like this. I think of it like a firewall or router, it’s just a low-level tool to be used in order to ensure that the network functions. It shouldn’t be used to carve the Fediverse into multiple completely independent services. We already have a situation like that where Facebook, Twitter, Reddit, etc are all their own island controlled by a small group of people.
The Fediverse’s promise is in the ability to have ONE social network that connects every person to every other person regardless of what platform you’re using. These de-federation campaigns are the antithesis of that idea. We should be looking for ways to ensure that the network is more robust and accessible to everyone… not ways to carve it up into different ideological segments.
I think we mostly agree and whichever way the community goes on this, the best thing for us to do is to create fun and useful federated content.
Here’s to that!