- cross-posted to:
- fediverse@kbin.social
- cross-posted to:
- fediverse@kbin.social
A response to Daring Fireball’s recent thinkpieces about Fediverse admins wanting to block Meta’s new ActivityPub platform.
A response to Daring Fireball’s recent thinkpieces about Fediverse admins wanting to block Meta’s new ActivityPub platform.
Ahah, yeah, this might probably be the underlying narrative. However, I don’t concern much with this, as if someone has this opinion, I already know there is no point in having this debate.
I am, generally speaking, but definitely I am when talking about the cyberspace. The reason is quite simple: the economic interests that big corporations have, where billions of dollars are at stake are straight up against my interests. Essentially everything they need, damages me. The need to foster controversy (which is proven to increase engagement), the need to create addiction, to commodify every single thing possible (data, actions, preferences, etc.), to lock-in users into their platforms. All these are not decisions based on the corporations being “evil” but it’s the only business model that the Silicon Valley (home of the “disruptors” and cradle of innovation) came up with in the last 20 years. The sole fact that the business model relies on advertising, causes all of this. This is why I think that corporations are inherently incompatible with the way I think the cyberspace should be, which is “not commodified”. Unfortunately this is by nature conflicting with what the corporations have to do to survive in this system (I don’t even want to attribute malice to them).
This said, I am not against for-profit by definition. In fact, I would be extremely happy if a bunch of people around the world make co-ops or even small or individual businesses to run, maintain and develop Fediverse software. I would be very happy if these people can make this their full time job (hence, earning a profit). However, it is clear that the business model cannot be the one that the corporations use.
Technically, even a corporation could change the business model, and I would even accept that, I just think it’s really, really, really, really unlikely in my opinion.
I think the list would be so long that I would need to open a PR to bump the character limits for comments.