Seriously i have zero idea what is going on with bluesky. I never used it. Why are people saying it’s centralised? I also heard that a lot of people are joining it.

  • JusticeForPorygon@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    0
    ·
    17 days ago

    I enjoy it, but I am fully aware that history could repeat itself, and I am ready to pack up and move if/when that time comes. For now, it’s big enough that I can follow communities I enjoy being a part of without worrying about the constant influx of racists/fascists.

    Those people are of course present, but they’re easy to block and move on.

  • /home/pineapplelover@lemm.ee
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    0
    ·
    16 days ago

    It claims to be decentralized but normal people can’t reasonably spin up a server like you can for Mastadon.

    Which means, if it goes to shit by whoever is holding the power behind it, then it will go to shit exactly like Xitter.

    With Mastadon, you can easily make an instance and jump to different instances that haven’t gone to shit.

    • Takumidesh@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      0
      ·
      16 days ago

      Normal people can’t reasonably spin up a mastodon server either.

      Everyone here seems to vastly overestimate the general public’s technical knowledge and desire for this kind of thing.

      You have technical knowledge hurdles, financial hurdles, ISP hurdles, government hurdles (in some countries), bandwidth hurdles, storage hurdles, and more.

      Running a server even on a raspberry pi takes a decent amount of effort, and when your server is down, because regular people aren’t going to have HA and battery backups and multiple Internet connections, etc, your service goes down.

      Most people, like 99.9999 percent of people don’t Want to deal with any of that, I mean hell, regular people don’t use ad blockers, know what linux is, what a raspberry pi is, what a server is, how any of this works, or care at all. So many people here or so drastically out of touch it’s wild.

      • /home/pineapplelover@lemm.ee
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        0
        ·
        16 days ago

        Why aren’t there a bunch of bluesky instances? Genuinely curious, cause after a couple searches I found guides on how to self host bluesky

        • monotremata@lemmy.ca
          link
          fedilink
          English
          arrow-up
          0
          ·
          16 days ago

          Because they didn’t turn on federation until last year, and at that point it was still limited to fewer than ten users per alternate server, and you had to manually request federation through a Discord server from an actual human. This year they’ve automated the federation process, but you still have to start with a tiny server, and they claim they’re going to raise the user limit gradually as new servers remain federated with the main server.

          But yeah, the upshot is bsky.social has 13 million users, and there are no other servers with notable numbers of users. That’s a pretty notable difference from ActivityPub.

  • Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    0
    ·
    17 days ago

    It’s slightly more than a green(blue?)washed Twatter.

    The fact it’s getting such a stellar rise over Mastodon is imho a bit sus - people behind it have coin & reach (political), I’m sure monies are being pumped into the bluesky sensationalization, like influences & media articles.

    Twatter has/had a lot of monetization potential & now is even more of a (really incredibly direct) political-tool, there are bound to be interest groups that would benefit from cutting it a bit. But all of them want more monies, so they ofc won’t help fossy things.

    • SanguinePar@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      0
      ·
      17 days ago

      Having used both, here my view on why BlueSky is outstripping Mastadon:

      • It is instantly familiar in operation to anyone who has used Twitter. It looks and feels almost the same to use in a way that Mastadon doesn’t (arguable whether that’s a good thing or not, but it makes for a comfortable transition).
      • There’s no messing around with instances to negotiate - you go to BlueSky.com and it just works. Hard to overstate how important that is in retaining people who take a look at a new platform.
      • There are a lot of people on it, it doesn’t feel empty like I have often found Mastadon.
      • There are a lot of relatively influential people on it, media people, authors and actors and comedians, who have largely shifted as a single mass (probably due to the three above reasons) - so for non-famous people there’s a sense of being in touch with what’s happening.
      • It’s riding a wave of positivity about itself, which Mastadon never had - this touches on your point about media coverage of it, but whether that’s really due to money being paid to news orgs or just due to journalists seeing what they are doing as being important for others to know about is open to question.

      I think the various high profile organisational defections to BS have been a big part of it too. I only looked at BS for the first time when I saw the story about the Guardian newspaper quitting Twitter.

      I took a look, created an account and was posting and following people within seconds, it was just really, really smooth. Again, that was not the case (for me) with Mastadon, where it took a while to figure some of it out, and it all just felt a bit fiddly and complicated.

      Much like Lemmy in fact, after leaving Reddit - but again there was enough of a swell of new people shifting as a mass that it felt like it was worth the hassle.

      • Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        0
        ·
        edit-2
        17 days ago

        Yes, so the ease of the whole onboarding process & communities/groups that migrated there.

        No arguments on the first one (tho stupid on both sides).

        What my brainhole is telling me is that the second argument feels a tad too big seeing how Mastodon basically didn’t grew in the same timeframe. What they call “content” and “community” creation feels driven, the “wave” as you put it.

        (But again, this is just imho & ‘a feeling’, I have no sauce, not even that much personal experience)

      • desentizised@lemm.ee
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        0
        ·
        16 days ago

        This is the only take based in reality. Nobody (except us) cares about openness, federation or business models. What matters are ease of use and adoption.

        Of course that doesn’t mean that the other takes are missing the mark in terms of history possibly repeating itself in the future. But if it does, that just means that (as is to be expected) the people don’t make momentary decisions with a bigger (collective) picture in mind. Design needs to address individual needs first and foremost especially when it comes to social media.

        Nobody joins a platform to beat corporate ownership of people’s digital lives. BlueSky manufactured adoption by starting out as an invite-only cool kids club. Having to pick a fediverse instance is an entry barrier. There will always be a lot less money to throw around when you’re trying to create something under the umbrella of freedom and openness. I don’t see how these movements could ever win, even if they provide an arguably better product.

      • pjwestin@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        0
        ·
        17 days ago
        • It is instantly familiar in operation to anyone who has used Twitter. It looks and feels almost the same to use in a way that Mastadon doesn’t (arguable whether that’s a good thing or not, but it makes for a comfortable transition).

        Yup, pretty much. I tried Mastodon and found it very unintuitive, but BlueSky was immediately understandable as a former Twitter user. I don’t really use either that much, but I’ve spent way more time with BlueSky.

        Honestly, it’s the same with Lemmy. I tried a lot of Reddit alternatives, both federated and centralized, and I landed on Lemmy because A) It has the only decently-sized user base and B) my preferred Reddit app, Sync, moved to Lemmy. Lemmy is similar enough to Reddit on it’s own that transitioning over wouldn’t have been difficult, but having Sync just made it that much easier.

      • ilinamorato@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        0
        ·
        17 days ago
        • There are a lot of people on it, it doesn’t feel empty like I have often found Mastadon.

        Mastodon isn’t empty. People just have to follow folks to actually get any content. Now, Bluesky definitely does the onboarding better in that regard, but this almost certainly comes down to people not knowing that they have to follow accounts to get content.

        • SanguinePar@lemmy.world
          link
          fedilink
          arrow-up
          0
          ·
          17 days ago

          Well possibly - I do follow people Mastadon though, and it still feels quiet to me. I probably need to spend more time finding people to follow.

          • ilinamorato@lemmy.world
            link
            fedilink
            arrow-up
            0
            ·
            16 days ago

            In order to get a similar experience to Twitter, you need to follow a lot more people on Mastodon than you did on Twitter, because you never get that algorithmic backfill (and, in fairness, because there are fewer people using it).

  • socsa@piefed.social
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    0
    ·
    17 days ago

    Just in general, people on the internet are haters. I don’t really have a strong opinion either way, but Bluesky could cure world hunger and make all dogs live 100 years and people on the internet would hate it.

    • desentizised@lemm.ee
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      0
      ·
      17 days ago

      World hunger can’t be cured for profit. The hunger of the many is directly caused by the greed of the few.

      But I’d love to see them try of course. The billions Musk has evaporated with his purchase could’ve also been spent less egotistically.

  • Psythik@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    0
    ·
    edit-2
    17 days ago

    My only problem with it is that it’s boring. Literally Shower Thoughts: The Website (featuring Politics).

    Supposedly there are people you can subscribe to to see some actual news and get away from all those boring text posts, but I can’t find them and don’t know where to look. I even used one of those websites that subscribe you to groups of people en-masse to help get you started, but that just made things worse. Now my feed is full of opinions from people I’ve never heard of, know nothing of, and couldn’t care less about.

    I’m sorry but I just don’t understand the appeal of this whole Twitter/Twitter clone thing.

    • TheSlad@sh.itjust.works
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      0
      ·
      17 days ago

      “Literally Shower Thoughts: The Website (featuring Politics).”

      Wasnt that basically the premise of Twitter anyways?

  • finderscult@lemmy.ml
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    0
    ·
    17 days ago

    It’s simply not a part of the fediverse and it’s centralized to a single instance. It’s not any different than Twitter, except no one interesting uses it.

  • kinkles@sh.itjust.works
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    0
    ·
    17 days ago

    Nothing is wrong with it. Fediverse bros are just salty that it’s getting all the traffic instead of mastodon.

    • Otter@lemmy.ca
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      0
      ·
      17 days ago

      Well, there are some things wrong with it though?

      It’s possible to criticize both Mastodon and Bluesky for their respective issues

        • ex_06@slrpnk.net
          link
          fedilink
          arrow-up
          0
          ·
          17 days ago

          B-Corp. But as long as they don’t show any kind of sustainable business model compared to their costs, ye the result doesn’t differ much

      • Carighan Maconar@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        0
        ·
        17 days ago

        It’s possible to criticize both Mastodon and Bluesky for their respective issues

        Sure, they’re both Twitter-like and hence inherently unsuited to having a discussion for starters.

        • daltotron@lemmy.ml
          link
          fedilink
          arrow-up
          0
          ·
          16 days ago

          Yeah this is kinda what I’ve never understood. We have these sorts of, complaints about the demographic movements of these platforms, sure, but their actual core structure is inherently optimized to prey on people’s worst instincts, make discussion basically impossible. To prioritize pithy remarks and one-liners over productive conversations, they prioritize public facing ideologues blowing up much smaller individuals. Lemmy’s slightly better in that regard, but I feel like we’re always somehow descending in quality from what even a basic forum would be capable of.

    • Carighan Maconar@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      0
      ·
      17 days ago

      I mean, as long as Twitter goes down, who exactly gets to do the killing blow among all the individual blows doesn’t truly matter now, does it?

      • comfy@lemmy.ml
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        0
        ·
        16 days ago

        It absolutely does. What happened to twitter could happen to a successor. The successor matters.

        • Carighan Maconar@lemmy.world
          link
          fedilink
          arrow-up
          0
          ·
          16 days ago

          Sure, but as you cannot know the future, it’s a bit tricky to pick a successor you want to support based on that, instead of absolutely right-now-essential things such as “Where people actually are”.

          It’s also important to keep in mind how long Twitter’s run was: It was originally founded 18 years ago. I’d be okay if every 10-15 years I have to get a new Twitter, tbh. I buy a new phone every 4-5 years, a new car every 15-20, I’m alright. It’s cheap to go onto a new Twitter, I’m far less resistant to change with that.

          That is to say: Sure, maaaybe (again, can’t truly know) Mastodon is superior on a technical level. But not only is that absolutely not how social media operates, and second it really doesn’t matter if a sucessor also goes down in 10+ years. People won’t be able to care any less if a successor lasts that long, and considering how quickly Mastodon has turned into a semi-ghost-town once Bluesky got big, I kinda know what I’d put my money onto.

          Of course all of this ignores a central problem with the entire category of services: They don’t conduct conversations well, even stuff like Misskey or Mastodon.

      • hedgehog@ttrpg.network
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        0
        ·
        17 days ago

        Depends on your perspective. Would it be fine for Meta Threads to replace it? Threads supports ActivityPub, so in some ways it likely interacts better with the fediverse.

        If we agree that Threads isn’t a suitable replacement, then clearly there’s some criteria a replacement should meet. A lot of the things that make Threads unpalatable are also true of Bluesky, particularly if your concern relates to the platform being under the control of a corporation.

        On the other hand, from the perspective of “Twitter 2.0 is now a toxic, alt-right cesspool where productive conversations can’t be had,” then both Threads and Bluesky are huge improvements.

        • Adderbox76@lemmy.ca
          link
          fedilink
          English
          arrow-up
          0
          ·
          16 days ago

          Supporting ActivityPub doesn’t excuse being owned and operated by META.

          Will Bsky eventually shit itself like Twitter did? Sure, maybe. That seems to be the normal path nowadays. And when it does, I’ve still got my Masto account that I try to keep active as well. But at the very least, Bsky is a different company. I can have a bsky account without being dragged into an entire META ecosystem designed to put their chosen content in front of my eyes.

          Even at it’s worst, the fact that Bsky is it’s own thing and not owned by a mega corporation puts it automatically about Threads, regardless of ActivityPub.

      • tomi000@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        0
        ·
        17 days ago

        Xitter wont die, it will just become even more of a far-right bubble for fake news and manipulation without resistance, just like Elon wants it to be.

    • zante@slrpnk.net
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      0
      ·
      17 days ago

      ….She said on Lemmy, a platform provided for free and free of ads by volunteers.

      Every day I’m more persuaded that in the main, Lemmy got the dregs of Reddit during the exodus, who are the nastiest most argumentative, most poorly informed shitheads the internet has to offer.

      • TheOubliette@lemmy.ml
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        0
        ·
        17 days ago

        The most recent and largest exodus was people protesting their apps going away. Imagine a person for whom site moderation leading to embracing Russophobic snuff films, excusing Nazi tattoos, genocide denial re: Palestine, and general censorship of the left were not reasons to leave but “my apps and app freedoms” moved them.

        So yes these are people obstinately fighting over something they just made up but it sounds right to them and matches the vibes of their parasocial bubble. They might literally die if they spoke casually and acknowledged faults.

      • CrypticCoffee@lemmy.ml
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        0
        ·
        16 days ago

        Anyway, that’s enough about yourself…

        Feels like you never truly where on Reddit if you felt it was a beacon of warmth and friendliness. Did you ever share an opinion contrary to the prevailing opinion on there?

    • TORFdot0@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      0
      ·
      17 days ago

      Nothing is wrong with it as long as everyone realizes that it isn’t really resistant to enshittification as the network stands now and isn’t meaningfully federated or decentralized yet

    • kittenzrulz123@lemmy.blahaj.zone
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      0
      ·
      17 days ago

      The problem is that bluesky pretends to be a fediverse platform but only as an aesthetic, the founders don’t understand the fediverse at all and they have made no real attempt to federate outside of lip service.

    • sibachian@lemmy.ml
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      0
      ·
      16 days ago

      what? so there’s nothing wrong with centralized commercial services? please explain what’s good about ANY centralized commercial service.

      • aeshna_cyanea@lemm.ee
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        0
        ·
        16 days ago

        uhh could you clarify for me how the fediverse works? I thought it was like 90% mastodon which is very much the twitter format

    • comfy@lemmy.ml
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      0
      ·
      16 days ago

      I disagree with saying there’s nothing wrong with it, just as I would disagree that there was nothing wrong with the original Twitter. It is creating conditions which lead it towards for-profit behaviour which will end up hurting users, unlike some other platforms which are not run for-profit.

      This is a far-reaching difference with real societal impacts if the platform becomes dominant, not just some difference in taste that can be hand-waved away as nothing.

  • RBG@discuss.tchncs.de
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    0
    ·
    17 days ago

    Nothing is wrong with it. It is just much earlier in the timeline of becoming twitter/xitter eventually. Maybe it’ll take longer this time, maybe the change will be more subtle.

  • Otter@lemmy.ca
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    0
    ·
    17 days ago

    https://lemmy.ca/comment/12906744

    I talked about it in this comment, which should hopefully still be recent enough to be accurate

    It’s still too soon to tell what they will do. It’s totally possible that they will take the necessary steps to be properly decentralized by transferring control of the registry / protocol to an independent non profit.

    Right now I feel that they don’t have much of an incentive to do that, since the vast majority of their users won’t care.

    I would love to be proven wrong

    • Otter@lemmy.ca
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      0
      ·
      17 days ago

      As a follow-up, if you have people on Bluesky you want to follow, go for it :) Community is important

      There is also a mastodon bluesky bridge that some people use to access both

  • chickentendrils@lemmy.ml
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    0
    ·
    16 days ago

    it’s microblogging

    I never used Twitter personally, only exposed thru osmosis, so a reboot is very underwhelming. Seems perfect for somebody.

  • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    0
    ·
    17 days ago

    The problem I see with BlueSky is, what’s the difference between Bluesky and Twitter?

    Did any learning take place? “Okay, clean sheet design, let’s do it again but better this time” what did they do to keep Bluesky from going the exact same direction Twitter did?

    • SanguinePar@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      0
      ·
      17 days ago

      I’ve been using it a couple of weeks and loving it. It’s just the way Twitter used to be - fun, quality content, from the people you choose to follow.

      No algorithm trying to feed you recommendations. No paid-for blue ticks. No hate-filled bile being ignored or endorsed by those in charge. If someone’s trolling you block/report them and they’re gone, just like that.

      At the moment it’s more or less everything Twitter should be. It may or may not last, but for the moment it’s great.

    • njm1314@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      0
      ·
      17 days ago

      It doesn’t promote and endorse literal Nazis. Why y’all pretending like this isn’t a big difference?

          • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
            link
            fedilink
            English
            arrow-up
            0
            ·
            edit-2
            16 days ago

            “Less nazi than Twitter for the next few months” isn’t good enough for me to adopt it. I’m not going to board a doomed ship.

            Let me be perfectly clear here: Fuck Elon Musk right in the aorta. I am NOT endorsing Twitter here. What I’m mostly doing is endorsing abandoning both microblogging and commercial for-profit social media as concepts.

            Bluesky is gonna get worse. They’re in attract mode right now just like any tech startup; they’re burning venture capital money operating at a loss in too good to be true mode to gather users and when they hit a certain adoption rate or simultaneous active user base all the shit Twitter and Threads do is gonna get turned on.

            “It’s got moderation.” It’s got thought police in potentia. Either they’re going to start using their moderation systems as a political cudgel or they’re going to start letting scammers and shit through because they profit from the traffic whatever that traffic is. You won’t be able to say the word “poop” but commercials for anorexia pills will make it through to teenagers. Can you name a commercial platform that didn’t eventually do one or both of those? The only one I can think of that didn’t just die young was MySpace, which continued to exist into its irrelevancy.

            I foresee a cycle of instability that goes something like “New platform just dropped, it’s like Facebook but it isn’t Facebook. It’s like Facebook used to be before algorithms fucked it up.” Early adopters join it, there’s a period where you still have to have Facebook because three of your friends whose ability to understand things doesn’t work won’t make the switch, eventually people leave those friends, everyone is standardized on the new thing, new thing does exactly what Facebook did, it fucks the world up again, “New platform just dropped, it’s like Screechbox but isn’t Screechbox, it’s like Screechbox before algorithms fucked it up.”

            I’m kicking that in the head right now.

            • njm1314@lemmy.world
              link
              fedilink
              arrow-up
              0
              ·
              16 days ago

              You people are fucking insane. You act like what the Muskrat is doing is normal and inevitable. No, a billionaire owner of a website losing his mind acting like an infant and going online publicly promoting and endorsing Nazis it’s not the norm. It’s not the inevitable Next Step.

              • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
                link
                fedilink
                English
                arrow-up
                0
                ·
                16 days ago

                How many ethnic cleansings has Facebook been instrumental in? I can think of at least one in Myanmar.

                Large commercial platforms being absolutely evil is NOT unique to Twitter. Again I challenge you to name me a large social media platform that didn’t either rot into a wasteland of scam bots or start committing atrocities.

                Very bad people own almost everything and their solution to any rising star is to buy and ruin it.

                Hell, I don’t want to adopt a platform that’s doomed to get as bad as Youtube let alone Facebook or Twitter. You’ve got to show me some low level structure that says “Here is why it can’t fall the way the last ones did.”

                I don’t give a shit about the Bluesky stock you bought. Bluesky is doomed, don’t adopt it.

                • njm1314@lemmy.world
                  link
                  fedilink
                  arrow-up
                  0
                  ·
                  16 days ago

                  Ooh clever moving of the goal post there. Show me one example of Mark Zuckerberg posting to Facebook about how awesome a literal Nazi is. Personally unblocking said Nazi , and endorsing their message . That’s the discussion buddy.

            • daltotron@lemmy.ml
              link
              fedilink
              arrow-up
              0
              ·
              16 days ago

              The problem is mostly that people see that as a natural progression of the free market, so they’re okay with it. That, and/or they’re totally blind to the fact that people like musk are symptomatic of a deeper problem with the system at work here. Myspace, early internet forums, any form of less explicitly centralized internet, those get blamed for not being “good enough” as a platform, compared to these other, more “successful” ventures, which inevitably use spam to make money or attract nazis to bolster their userbase in a short term bargain. It doesn’t matter to your average user that those platforms fell apart explicitly because larger market actors all swam around them like pirahnas and blasted them with spam and bots and all that shit in order to explicitly tear them apart and try to make a quick buck off of their shit.

              In the market, that’s seen as a you problem, as a personal failing, if you can’t avoid that, or if you’re not willing to play along with that. That’s the average person’s view of any previous platform. These platforms rise and fall like, almost every decade or so at this point, more at the onset, obviously. People don’t have enough of a long term memory to remember why the last platform died and how it followed the exact same trajectory as the current thing.

  • daltotron@lemmy.ml
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    0
    ·
    16 days ago

    People dislike it because it’s not federated, but hot take: federation doesn’t solve enshittification. It just devolves everything into little shitty internet fiefdoms. It doesn’t do anything to prevent the inherent problems that arise as a result of having everyone freeball a random moderation structure, where they can outsource their agency to some guy they don’t know, with the illusion that there’s some clear set of rules or useful tools that exist somewhere off in the distance, being used by the “correct” actors and moderators. Which in turn means that everything becomes vulnerable to any abuse of the static, singular, broad rules, inside of these walled gardens that people are basically locked into.

    You get bait, you get ragebait, people taking advantage of the singular “algorithms” in order to game the system for maximum attention, and you incentivize that behavior because you make it way too easy to engage in. You get people paying to get on the front page of reddit, and you get eglin air force base being the most reddit addicted town. People think that AI abuse is some recent phenomenon, but it’s not, bots have been on the internet forever, and people have been incentivized to engage in bot-like behaviors forever. Eventually you get a huge, hollow system, where everything has the guise of legitimate human interaction at the surface level, but is really just subject to this huge system of incentives and planned interactions which people are made subconscious of.

    You’d really need the ability to have account migration for a better decentralized network, and you’d probably actually just need self-hosting for everyone. You’d probably want blocklists to easily propagate around (+2 for bluesky), and you’d probably actually want those to have easily copied and pasted rules that could be shared between users to prevent spam and make it so abuse is less common and easily prevented before it happens.

    Which is what the usenet already had/has. It’s just that the common consensus (which I believe to be false), is that the usenet is too hard to use, and requires demands too much intellectually from its users. If you decide to take this philosophy to the extreme, you end up with something like tiktok, where the idea is that people use their premade google account, scroll downwards forever, and that’s it.

    I wouldn’t mistake this as being some sort of like, natural occurrence, though, that’s an intentional decision, made by businessmen, that want to maximize sales through an in-app store and control a massive cultural space. That’s a specific decision that they’ve made, and they’ve tuned their platforms to take advantage of people’s worst instincts in order to perpetuate that. Often with the assistance and explicit consent of governments which want these platforms to be used to track everything.

    They pour money into that system, it’s an explicit decision they’re making to push that onto people as a result of current economic and political structures, and it’s due to those structures that they have that power to be able to do that, and due to those structures that these shit systems succeed, keep being cycled out in boom and bust cycles, over the better systems that people create.

    • comfy@lemmy.ml
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      0
      ·
      16 days ago

      but hot take: federation doesn’t solve enshittification. It just devolves everything into little shitty internet fiefdoms.

      Enshittification, by definition, is a result of profit seeking, especially from venture-capital funded projects.

      Shitty internet fiefdoms are shitty, but it’s got nothing to do with enshittification.

      • daltotron@lemmy.ml
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        0
        ·
        16 days ago

        Yeah, the broader point I’m making is that the federation doesn’t solve the entire encompassing system in which this all exists.

        Federated projects both have their own problems in those shitty little fiefdoms, as said, and are probably never going to succeed in this broader economic context where huge, profit seeking, venture capital funded market actors are able to spin up a new twitter ripoff in no time at all. This is while similar market actors in the form of spam farms, bot farms, adversarial influencers looking to make a quick buck, and moderators themselves, have incentives to game whatever systems are in place on any platform, not just the large ones. This then increases the strain on smaller projects, and decreases their ability to actually be sustainable long-term, especially in comparison to these huge market actors and their platforms.

        The systems that are gamed, in the modern internet, are cordoned off and channeled by a bunch of moderators that we all trust to kind of do the work for the rest of us, apply the rules, use the tools to their discretion. Federation just makes it so you can jump from one moderated section to the other, one administrated section to the other, while on the same “platform”. But it doesn’t solve the inherent problems at play here, where moderators and higher level administrators are incentivized to make their platforms shittier with the invitation of advertisers, the invitation of more bad faith posters which can increase engagement, the adoption of shorter form, less substantive content, things like that. Those drive up traffic, and make more money, money they can use to then make their platforms “better”, or basically, to eat up more of the market share. Eventually you play the short term gains game long enough, and then your platform’s growth sputters out, and then venture capital dries up, and then you end up making the moderation more lax as a last resort, and then nazis come flooding in. Then the platform either dies, or mutates into a horrible shambling corpse.

        Even if you were to cut out all of that as a possibility, say, by trying to make your stuff copyleft, then you just cut out the route towards short term growth for anyone using your particular platform, and then you’ll just get outdone by all of the other market actors which lean into that short term growth, while still filling your platform’s niche, while using none of the specific parts of your platform.

        It’s basically not going to succeed as an approach because it, as we keep learning on the internet over and over and over and over, it exists in a broader material context, the context of the market.