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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 13th, 2023

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  • My concern here is that culture will not likely remain unchanged post-Meta, and while change is inevitable, the change imposed by Meta is one that I don’t welcome.

    I am on Akkoma for my microblogging and Lemmy for link aggregation. I’ve made some incredible friends over the past year, and participate in communities that I very much value. Even through the waves of joiners off Twitter’s and Reddit’s exoduses, there was still enough cultural intertia to where new people could see “this is the standard of conduct”. Of course, there are no monoliths, so people go off to wherever they’re comfortable and the instance rules align with their values.

    The concern is that Threads, as of now, is isolated from the rest of the Fediverse, but is building and transferring it’s culture from already existing social media. Specifically the thing I came to the fediverse to escape, as did many others.

    At some point, it’s expected that Meta will enable federation for Threads. For the rest of the Fediverse, it’ll be drinking from the metaphorical firehose. There will have been this culture that was built and backed by Meta, and for those people there will be no change other than the gates being open. They won’t have learned to use content warnings/headings, they won’t have learned how to interact with other servers, the etiquette just likely won’t be there, and why should they adapt to what the rest of the Fediverse is doing? They don’t value it in the same way we do.

    This is ultimately why I don’t want Meta here. The protocol and involvement because of what will be their massive weight will be at risk absolutely - this is the thing everyone is talking about with EEE. But even if the protocol survives, the culture likely won’t. Even if I defederate with Threads, which I have proactively, it will have a ripple effect in how new joiners interact with the existing system. It’ll be overwhelming, and everyone will feel that presence, even indirectly.

    Fediverse was built to be a break from algorithmic social media and the corporate owned negative-engagement-drives-views doom scrolling culture. Some people might want to follow celebrities and have viral content pushed to them. But that’s not why I’m here, and I worry that even with the choices that I can make as an owner of my own instances that Meta’s involvement will send me looking again for a new safe space.

    I came here to escape Twitter, Facebook, et al. I’m not about to welcome them to the table.




  • I scoped my PC build in 2013 with a GTX 770 with Star Citizen in mind. Even then SC becoming a reality was a coin flip - I was (and still am) a huge fan of Freelancer so I knew what I was in for on a Chris Roberts project before I backed. Built the PC, popped $25 down on an Aurora, and figured we’d see how it played out.

    I’m still using that PC as a daily driver, granted with an upgrade to a GTX 980 and some extra ram in the time since. It’s long in the tooth and is probably going to be retired by years’ end, but I laugh a little thinking about how that computer had a whole life in the time SC has been in development.

    I did run the hangar module when it first came out, so at the very least I did get to see my ship using that machine.


  • This is a fantastic point. I watched several migration waves from Twitter to the Mastodon/*oma/*key network over the course of Nov-Feb and each became less impactful as instances and developers understood better how that traffic would flow. Consider also that those platforms had also been around for a few years already.

    Lemmy and kbin are very, very young still, so it will be great to see them develop over the course of the coming months. I expect the next couple weeks leading to the June 30 3PA closures on Reddit will be spent preparing for another wave.