- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
I really don’t like the tone of some parts of this. Some of it is good, like reassurances around the privacy measures that Mastodon instances take to protect user IPs.
The bit I most have an issue with specifically is the section on Embrace, Extend, Extinguish.
Well, even if Threads abandoned ActivityPub down the line, where we would end up is exactly where we are now. XMPP did not exist on its own outside of nerd circles, while ActivityPub enjoys the support and brand recognition of Mastodon.
I think this misses the point or dismisses of some of the fears around Embrace, Extend, Extinguish and jumps straight to the idea that Threads may abandon ActivityPub. I don’t think this is the concern, and my major concern is around the Extend part of the strategy.
Here’s the strategy, from the wikipedia page
- Embrace: Development of software substantially compatible with a competing product, or implementing a public standard.
- Extend: Addition and promotion of features not supported by the competing product or part of the standard, creating interoperability problems for customers who try to use the “simple” standard.
- Extinguish: When extensions become a de facto standard because of their dominant market share, they marginalize competitors that do not or cannot support the new extensions.
ActivityPub implementation is already pretty heterogeneous which is both a strength and introduces some fragility into “The Federation”. We see this even between fediverse-centric platforms where certain interactions are supported or not supported. Right now, I can see a Mastodon account from a Lemmy interface but none of its posts. This is fine, because Lemmy is not Mastodon and its concerns are different and built around participation in communities; but it is a crack in the ActivityPub standard that’s exploitable.
Following the strategy, Meta can start developing its own Threads-specific features which Fediverse implementors can choose to implement or not. Different Fediverse software implementations will need to make a decision as to whether they implement certain features, just as they do now. Some may refuse point-blank, which is fine. But this "[creates] interoperability problems for customers who try to use the ‘simple’ standard.".
Recent posts from @[email protected] and the linked blog post from @[email protected] indicate that they are at least nominally on board with Meta’s involvement in the Fediverse and are devolving the responsibility of blocking interaction with Threads onto Admins and Users. It’s of course impossible to accurately predict the future, but to me that indicates that there may be willingness to develop Threads-friendly functionalities in the future, at least in Mastodon and Pixelfed codebases.
Certainly before the Reddit apocalypse, and arguably still now, Mastodon is seen as the flagship Fediverse platform. Eugene basically says it in his post:
while ActivityPub enjoys the support and brand recognition of Mastodon.
Again, fine. But that causes its own issues. This github issue highlights the concerns that diaspora* developers had over implementing ActivityPub as a federation protocol. In particular, this comment eloquently describes the heterogeneity of ActivityPub implementations. And also makes the following point, which I agree with:
The current modus operandi seems to be to just look at Mastodon and copy their implementation because that seems to be the only way to get something working. That, however, is not about supporting AP, it’s about supporting Mastodon’s dialect of AP, and their subset of that.
Mastodon is arguably a leader in the Fediverse space, and if Mastodon’s development trends towards supporting Meta’s extensions then everyone else may be inclined to keep up or risk losing some interoperability that users of their software have come to enjoy. Forking codebases doesn’t fix the issue; it just means there’s more implementations only supporting the “basic” implementation of the standard.
In terms of what it means for the average user on the Fediverse? Who knows. Joining instances not federated to Meta or refusing non-Meta features is definitely viable as a strategy.
For me personally, the major loss is the feeling that I’m in a space where there aren’t any major corporate players. I left those other platforms to seek community-run spaces where the software was a little janky and the servers sometimes crashed, but it was fine because They weren’t there. I feel that they’ve just barged back into my space now. I’ll probably get over it in time. I don’t use Mastodon and my Lemmy’ing is mostly limited to lemmygrad; but it’s still a little sad in the short-term.
Yep, they’ll extend the shit out of the protocol, and that can take any form. It’ll probably start with cute emoji or gifs that look great in threads but render as some weird code in other clients, and it’ll probably escalate from there until you can’t use the fediverse in anything other than the threads client. After which they’ll turn off federation altogether.
It’s by Meta, that is all I need to know to stay away from it.
A lot of the people I follow are trying out Threads, but because of no federation yet, you need to use their app to see what they post there. It’s a bit clumsy and I don’t think that they launched without fed on accident.
I wonder if we’ll also see people posting on both Threads and Mastodon, which will mean having to follow two accounts for one person if I want to see both. Just seems odd to use both rather than migrate.
Trying to think positive about this, but just not seeing many upsides so far.
It’s a bit clumsy and I don’t think that they launched without fed on accident.
No, they defined a minimum valuable product and had to get a somewhat stable app out the door to capitalize on Twitter’s negative press. Deadlines are how features get cut. You see this in video games all the time.
The EU has been really great lately. Gdpr laws are protecting us from all of these shitty preditory services that Americans will be the first to sign up on.
Very shallow and naive view. I hate to be the old-timer here, but I think @gargron is too young to understand what happened with XMPP and similar previous attempts.
I think @gargron is too young to understand what happened with XMPP and similar previous attempts.
XMPP had its own problems outside Google Talk’s use of that protocol, most notably that smartphones became a thing and the protocol at that time wasn’t really suitable for environments where connections are lost all the time.
An excellent summary. I think instance owners shouldn’t be too quick to block threads. ActivityPub was built around low trust, so why not give them a chance?
I thought it was a terrible summary where they missed all the things they were saying that would make me switch to a defederated instance or delete my account. They got one thing which is like magic beans and gave away free airspace to those fuckers!
Because there’s low trust, and then there’s looking at everything Meta/Facebook have done over the past 15 years and thinking “yep, they’ll be alright”.
They are a prodit driven company trying to obtain 100% market share. What do you think is going to happen?