No Stupid Questions
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I posted this on Mastodon, but I completely disagree with the idea of defederating from Meta instances on principal for the same reason I don't want my Fastmail account to stop interacting with Gmail accounts just because I feel Google is too corporate. That defeats the entire purpose of open standards and federated content. I should be able to choose to personally block content from Meta instances if I want to, but it's to the detriment of the community to fracture the Fediverse just because it's starting to grow large enough to attract attention from one of the big tech companies.
The reality is, a federated Meta service would at least initially grow the idea of federated social media as a whole, and likely drive traffic to Kbin/Lemmy/Mastodon from people who want to get off of the Meta platforms, but don't want to cut contact with their friends/coworkers/enemies entirely. While I probably wouldn't make an account, I'd be interested in at least being able to follow a few of my friends who I actually have interest in seeing updates from via my Masto/Kbin accounts.
And I'm aware of the embrace/extend/extinguish paradigm, but premature defederation isn't the answer there either.
I'm an advocate for federated content for convenience, not on principal alone.
Admin decided defederation is the reason I left beehaw (and by extension didn't go to lemmy.world/shitjustworks.) I get why they did it, but it was alienating in that it took away my choice to interact in communities on both sides so I had to choose a neutral instance (and eventually ended up on kbin anyway.)
Having said that, I've seen references to a mass defederation of Gab which I am less upset about.
The difference with Facebook though is they will likely bring a ton of users and having your instance defederate by default doesn't really impact a massive company coming in like it did with Gab.
I'll be interested to see what, of anything, shakes out from this.
I agree, I think we'd be shooting ourselves in the foot by immediately defederating. This is an opportunity for a lot of people to get their feet wet with the Fediverse, and potentially bring them to more open parts of the platform. I don't think a lot of people understand that Meta is free to set-up their own dystopian corpo-instance without that carrying over to affect the independent ones.
Absolute darkest timeline, they wave enough money to buy out their competitor platforms or the owner of Activitypub itself, open source is closed now, and the concept of federation becomes corporate like everything else already is and apparently always will be. Not entirely likely and not to that extent, but it's technically possible. While they aren't guaranteed to take the world's biggest shit in the pool, it would be naive to suggest they're going to play nice with everything forever, given who they are and how much control they could have if they just put enough time into strong-arming it.
You and the comment you were replying to make really solid points and I enjoyed the expanded perspective. It's these longer, actually nuanced comments that are beginning to really make me feel how ridiculously people treat the downvote button. And I think overall I've been swayed to support meta being blocked by individuals rather than defederated by whole instances. But I'm still not going to pretend this is all they're going to do if they can possibly do more. It was inevitable, but I don't have to trust facebook over it
Strongly agreed. Federation becoming mainstream accessible is a good thing IMO. Content is what made reddit good and let's face it: we don't have that much of it. Eg, my local city sub used to be fairly active. I don't have anything like that here. I even tried to make it myself, posted a bit, and tried to promote in relevant places, and last I checked it's population: me, myself, and I. We clearly need far more people to be able to have many of the smaller, niche communities that I love.