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Meta/Instagram launched a new product called Threads today (working title project92). It adds a new interface for creating text posts and replying to them, using your Instagram account. Of note, Meta has stated that Threads plans to support ActivityPub in the future, and allow federation with ActivityPub services. If you actually look at your Threads profile page in the app your username has a threads.net tag next to it - presumably to support future federation.

Per the link, a number of fediverse communities are pledging to block any Meta-directed instances that should exist in the future. Thus instance content would not be federated to Meta instances, and Meta users would not be able to interact with instance content.

I'm curious what the opinions on this here are. I personally feel like Meta has shown time and time again that they are not very good citizens of the Internet; beyond concerns of an Eternal September triggered by federated Instagram, I worry that bringing their massive userbase to the fediverse would allow them to influence it to negative effect.
I also understand how that could be seen to go against the point of federated social media in the first place, and I'm eager to hear more opinions. What do you think?

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[-] nolefan33@sh.itjust.works 116 points 1 year ago

Meta has repeatedly introduced features intended to scrape larger amounts of data about our lives and tie it all into one big profile that they can sell. This area of the internet feels like one of the few remaining areas that they haven't reached, and I'd bet everything I have that's why they're introducing this. I couldn't be more strongly against allowing them a way to link my data here with the data they have from my usage of their existing products. While I understand the idea of open federation to allow disparate communities to interact, one of the lines I'll draw is letting a massive corporation in like that.

[-] MrScottyTay@sh.itjust.works 33 points 1 year ago

They'll still be able to scrape the fediverse and all instances without threads federating with them. Defederating doesn't stop their access to your PUBLIC data on the fediverse.

[-] Sabre363@sh.itjust.works 19 points 1 year ago

Anyone can access the public data, but that is not a good excuse to invite them in through the front door. Defederating, at the very least, sends the message that they are not welcome to participate here.

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[-] imaqtpie@sh.itjust.works 101 points 1 year ago

The day this instance federates with Meta is the day I leave. They, and any other big corporations, can fuck all the way off. We have seen where that path leads time and time again.

[-] pancakes@sh.itjust.works 24 points 1 year ago

I think the majority are against federating with meta so we're probably safe but same.

[-] loaf@sh.itjust.works 23 points 1 year ago

Well said, and same.

[-] wheeldawg@sh.itjust.works 85 points 1 year ago

Please for the love of Internet connectivity as a whole: block anything remotely attached to Facebook, not just the instance, but in general Internet daily life.

Zuck should die forgotten.

It does not go against the point of the fediverse to do so, either. Why would the ability to do this be baked into the code if it was not the intent to use it in certain situations? This would be a perfect use.

I can see maybe certain instances wanting it for whatever reason, but I'll be packing up and moving to one that blocks it if this one allows it.

[-] 2Blave@sh.itjust.works 34 points 1 year ago

Agreed. With the nature of the Fediverse, defederating with anything from Meta doesn't really restrict access for those who actually wish to interact with them. They can simply join their next nefarious venture.

The drawbacks to interacting with a company that so obviously only chases profit above all else far outweigh any "benefits " of their content.

Ser Robin had the right idea: bravely run away.

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[-] sonstwas@sh.itjust.works 24 points 1 year ago

Playing devil's advocate a bit here:

Considering that I rate Facebook as evil as Google, would you support "defederating" Google Mail from other mail services?

In my opinion, the fediverse/ActivityHub is just the underlying protocol to enable people to connect to each other just like SMTP and whether I want to contact someone using a service provider that I don't like is my choice and should not be the choice of my service provider...

[-] SomeAmateur@sh.itjust.works 37 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

My understanding is that the main problem is allowing them to get any foot in the door in the first place. They are not in it to be nice, they are in it to beat out and absorb the competition for their gain. The fediverse is about giving users a place to go that's not full of ads and algorithms. They only see us as untapped revenue streams.

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[-] meat_popsicle@sh.itjust.works 20 points 1 year ago

would you support “defederating” Google Mail from other mail services?

Not OP, but yes. They have entirely too much control over email traffic. You have to play ball with Alphabet or not at all if you want to host an email server today - I don’t want that to be the fate of the fediverse as well.

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[-] Kiwileaks@sh.itjust.works 64 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)
[-] Fluid@aussie.zone 44 points 1 year ago

An important reminder of the right play here. If we are to keep the fediverse out of the hands of enshitification, we need to stay away from letting corporates play the game. Don’t federate.

[-] pretzel@sh.itjust.works 19 points 1 year ago

I've been having a few back-and-forths in this thread about how it'd kinda suck from a user's perspective if my instance defederated from Threads, but after reading those historical examples, I'm more amenable to instances defederating. I saw a bunch of people talking about how Meta was gonna "ruin" the fediverse, but not really elaborating past that. Your link explains that better than anyone else has.

I'll have to ruminate on that some more to see how I truly feel about it, but those examples are compelling.

[-] agoramachina@sh.itjust.works 18 points 1 year ago

Excellent article. I am completely against federating with Meta, and this does a great job of explaining why.

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[-] cyborganism@lemmy.ca 64 points 1 year ago

I came to the fediverse to get away from Meta and Twitter and Google and the like.

So personally I'd prefer if they stayed out of here.

[-] VorpalPen@sh.itjust.works 61 points 1 year ago

I just joined this place this week, fleeing reddit of course. So my vote may not be worth much. But if this place becomes meta-adjacent then I'll see myself out. I have no desire to interact with Mark "move fast and break adolescent girls' self esteem" Zuckerberg.

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[-] gonzo0815@sh.itjust.works 58 points 1 year ago

I don't get how this is even a question. Most people are here because they want to get away from corporate social media. It's like asking a person who managed to leave a cult if it was okay for them if they build a church on their plot.

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[-] sickpusy@sh.itjust.works 52 points 1 year ago

Remember when Facebook and Google both were using XMPP protocol? They just need fediverse users for now to get free content. They will always delink when they can. That's profit logic for you.

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[-] Goldmage263@sh.itjust.works 48 points 1 year ago

I would prefer Facebook/Instagram/Meta to stay far away from the fediverse that I use. I do not like anything about the online communities they develop.

[-] ssalad@sh.itjust.works 47 points 1 year ago

Do not federate with anything Meta

[-] Shit@sh.itjust.works 43 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I think we should preemptively add them to the defederated list at least until we get more info on what exactly they are doing. We are already having enough sync issues in the fedverse. We can come back to the subject in like a month with an agora vote on refederation.

[-] weariedfae@sh.itjust.works 43 points 1 year ago

Excuse me for being crass, I sincerely apologize, but fuck Threads.

[-] gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.works 40 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I strongly support basically firewalling the fediverse from anything Meta/Twitter/MS/Google/ as a default behavior. They will 100%, without question make some sort of attempt to co-opt, corrupt, and monetize this ecosystem unless their interference is actively mitigated and corralled.

And sure, maybe there can be a collection of instances that do federate with Big Tech… but to be blunt, I’d look at those mostly as canaries in the coal mine.

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[-] RavenFellBlade@sh.itjust.works 40 points 1 year ago

I feel like this question might be missing a bigger picture: What's going on with the Internet?

Facebook/Meta, Twitter, and Reddit are all owned by people in the US. We've seen in tbr past few election cycles that Twitter and Reddit in particular were vitally important to progressive movements in the US, while Facebook largely sat by unperturbed as their platform was used to plaster right-wing disinformation in every corner of the internet they could reach. Now, as another election cycle is gearing up, we see Twitter and Reddit doing things that make NO SENSE for a business, but make PERFECT SENSE if you were a MAGA nut trying to take over or dismantle a successful progressive platform, at the same time as you have Meta moving to infect and corrupt the one significant platform that offers a great alternative to both Twitter and Reddit.

I'm not usually a conspiracy minded person, but the more I think about it, the more I conclude that this is the only explanation that can make any sense of Elon and (fuck)u/Spez deliberately imploding their platforms. When you factor in that both of them seem to also be encouraging right-wing provocateurs to return to their platforms while wholesale silencing any progressive dissent... this is a coordinated assault meant explicitly to tamper with the US political system while also driving right-wing fascism abroad.

Do NOT allow Meta access. At this point, I'm not sure why the license doesn't explicitly blacklist specific bad actors like Meta from using the ActivityPub software in the first place.

[-] cynetri@midwest.social 22 points 1 year ago

What I do know is that ActivityPub was created by a lot of people in the queer community, who created moderation features like defederating specifically for the purpose of blocking discriminatory instances, so there's that

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[-] ProfessorChaos@sh.itjust.works 39 points 1 year ago

From a post on Mastodon comparing privacy policies. Meta gonna pillage the village.

https://mastodon.social/@llebrun/110664586216685040

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[-] FARTYSHARTBLAST@sh.itjust.works 38 points 1 year ago

Don't federate, they are a terrible company.

[-] cyanarchy@sh.itjust.works 36 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Meta's interests as a corporate entity are inherently incompatible with the goals behind the creation of a decentralized and federated service. I do not believe they are able or willing to act in good faith, and I don't think their presence should be tolerated. Personally, I did not jump ship from Reddit to be reconnected with the likes of Facebook or Instagram. The entire effort feels to me like a panic response to the notion that there are people like myself not being shown what Meta wants seen, and they can stay mad about it.

Addendum:

On the other hand, I think people should be the arbiters of the content they view. I don't get the notion of browsing /all and then being upset at what you find there, it's just a raw firehose of what people are up to on the internet. There is a value in letting people consume the content they want, where and how they want it. I'm sure someone would be happy to be linked in to this larger ecosystem. There's a lemmy instance dedicated to mirroring reddit content and I don't see the appeal of that, but more power to the people who get use from it.

The nature of the fediverse and activitypub is that we can't stop Meta from making use of this platform. We're going to have to handle this situation by proving that we have something different and perhaps better than anything Meta can offer. But I won't stay in a space where their size and influence is permitted to dominate all conversation, it's already slightly jarring to hear people talk as if lemmy.world were the de-facto center of the lemmyverse.

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[-] Slacking@sh.itjust.works 35 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I hate Facebook as much as the next guy but I think this whole defederation business just stinks. I left Reddit because they were forcing me to use their app, but now I'm in a community that chooses what I see?

I'm hoping lemmy sets up a way to ban instances because this should 100% be up to the user.

There's also the fact that this place is starving for content, this really feels like a shoot yourself in the foot kind of moment. The userbase is going to completely stall if there's an alternative with 100x more content that can't be accessed from our endpoint.

Its definitely a complicated situation, I know it's an unpopular opinion so I'll accept the downvotes.

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[-] alliestear@sh.itjust.works 33 points 1 year ago

Defederate and preferably also defenestrate.

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[-] Potato@sh.itjust.works 32 points 1 year ago

While I'm generally opposed to defederation as a general rule, I'm also old enough to have suffered through Microsoft's Embrace Extend Extinguish paradigm. Never again. Absolutely no federation with megacorp instances.

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[-] Robotnik99@lemmynsfw.com 31 points 1 year ago

I am reposting my answer from another thread : Nothing good will come from meta ( or any other Gafa Microsoft included), ever. They will alway look for a way to corrupt any social media to their favor in order try to dominate the Web. At this point of the internet history anyone giving a speck of trust to them is dream walking into a disaster waiting to happen. There are already trying to bring Insta and activityPub service lol , and they didn't haven't started yet.

[-] _haha_oh_wow_@sh.itjust.works 31 points 1 year ago

I am 100% OK with defederating everything run by Meta: They are a blight on the Internet.

[-] merc@sh.itjust.works 30 points 1 year ago

In the 1990s, Microsoft had an internal strategy called Embrace, Extend, Extinguish. Microsoft saw the emerging Internet as a threat to their business, so they wanted to kill it. The basic idea was:

  • Embrace: Develop software compatible with an existing standard
  • Extend: Add features that are not part of the standard, creating interoperability issues
  • Extinguish: Using their dominant market share, snuff out competitors who don't or can't support the non-standard protocol

It was working for Microsoft, and was a contributing factor in their killing off Netscape. For those too young to remember, Mozilla is the open-source "liferaft" that Netscape created before their business was destroyed by Microsoft. But, these days it's effectively controlled by Google, who provides 85% of their funding, as long as they keep Google as the default Firefox search engine and don't rock the boat.

The only thing that stopped Microsoft from destroying the open Internet was the antitrust case brought against them by the US Department of Justice. Antitrust action is the only thing that has kept innovation happening in tech. The antitrust case against IBM from 1969 to 1982 allowed for the rise of Microsoft. The antitrust case against Microsoft allowed for the rise of Google. Many people think we're overdue for strong antitrust actions against Google and Facebook/Meta.

Facebook bought out every social competitor they could: Instagram, WhatsApp, etc. They can't buy out the Fediverse, but they have to see it as an existential threat. Because of that, they're undoubtedly going to try to use their near-monopoly status to kill off the Fediverse.

The "Embrace" stage will likely be just implementing ActivityPub. That will convince a lot of people that Meta is really on their side, and are working hard to be a good Fediverse citizen. They'll probably even hire people who are current developers working on the ActivityPub standard, or who have developed key ActivityPub apps.

The "Extend" stage will probably involve adding features to "ActivityPub Alpha" which Threads uses but nothing else uses. It might involve some Meta-specific things, like embedding Instagram in an unusual way. It might involve something that is really expensive for an independent server, but affordable if you're a multi-billion dollar company, like some kind of copyright check, or flagging if something is AI-generated. The features they're likely to add won't be offensive, they'll probably be good ideas. It's just that they'll add them before going through the standards process, and so standards-compliant ActivityPub implementations will seem old and outdated. That will convince many people to move their accounts to Threads, or will at the least reduce the growth for non-Threads ActivityPub.

The "Extinguish" phase will be like when Google shut down Google Reader. Why bother having a standards-compliant way of doing things when usage is so low?

So... yeah, block Meta.

[-] loaf@sh.itjust.works 29 points 1 year ago

For me, being on the fediverse is an escape from big social. That’s the whole reason I’m here. Conversations are more organic, less restrictive, and generally better. Plus, it has an awesome DIY feel to it.

I don’t want to lose that to Meta’s insatiable hunger for data.

If we could ensure 100% compliance with a meta-blockade then I'd be for it.

However, that isn't going to happen and any instances that do federate with Meta will be the part of the Fediverse that exists to billions of people. Those instances will become the dominate instances on the Fediverse for people who want to get away from Meta but still access the Fediverse services. Lemmy, as it stands now, is only a few million people at most. We simply do not have the weight to throw around on this issue.

It is inevitable that commercial interests join the Fediverse and the conversation should be around how we deal with that inevitability rather than attempting to use de-federation as a tool to 'fix' every issue.

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[-] Codename_goose@sh.itjust.works 28 points 1 year ago

I know I’m late to the conversation, but I stopped using Facebook 10 years ago. I left Reddit after Apollo stopped working, and now that Twitter is heading the same way I would prefer to not associate with them. I agree it stinks that it’s yet another platform that splits people up deciding how and whom they interact with, but I do not want meta to mess with something that works the way it should without corporate’s fingers in the cookie jar.

[-] blunderworld@lemmy.ca 26 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I'm all for it. Ive heard arguments for and against interacting with meta instances in this way, and I won't pretend to fully understand all the details.

Still, Meta has proven that they aren't trustworthy time and time again. I'd really just prefer to remove myself from them as much as possible.

[-] jasonwherbst@sh.itjust.works 25 points 1 year ago

No meta for me. They ruin everything that they touch. The Fediverse is the antithesis of all things meta; keep that shit outta here.

[-] Master@sh.itjust.works 25 points 1 year ago

I dont think anyone should be federating with threads.meta. They dont have good intentions and are either just using the activitypub protocol because it was there and they needed something fast to take advantage of twitter quickly or because they actively are trying to take over and destroy the activitypub protocol. Either way the fediverse gains nothing from federating with them.

[-] Socsa@sh.itjust.works 24 points 1 year ago

I seriously doubt meta is going to have an open federation policy anyway. It's definitely going to be a tiered white list of Meta-approved Activitypub apps and instances. With built-in monetization for devs in the Activitypub "market."

Honestly it's what reddit should have done if they were smart. Figure out a way to monetize through the API by pulling third party apps into a walled garden.

[-] thelsim@sh.itjust.works 24 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I have a lot of feelings about this matter. But my main concern is that I value the idea of privacy, anonimity and the right to reveal as much of yourself online as you are willing to do so. And Meta has shown time and time again that they are actively against the very concept of letting people be.
Maybe not today, and maybe not tomorrow, but they will find a way to ruin this for everyone if it helps their bottom line.

On top of that, it's opening the floodgates to a stream of content that will most likely drown out the individuality of our communities. We're still growing and building, I would love for us to have our own place before the Meta masses join.

edited: spelling

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[-] rarely@sh.itjust.works 23 points 1 year ago

I'll put it this way:

  • on the one hand, there's React.
  • on the other hand, there's React.

Or, to translate for those of us who don't speak "asshole":

  • Facebook has contributed to open source, they've created one of the most popular javascript frameworks around: React, or ReactJS. This is software made by Facebook, possibly even still maintained by Facebook, which you can use in your site today for free (and no, it doesn't make your site look like facebook).
  • On the other hand, React became its own monster, with some people misunderstanding it as the end-all-be-all framework. Also, it's nice but it's a lot and arguably better frameworks now exist. My point was that the company carried more weight on this project than maybe it should have.

There are good arguments for blocking Facebook as a whole on the web, such as cookie tracking. I don't like Facebook, but I guess I would consider any people who have made the jump to federated platforms as potentially missing out on interacting with their forever-facebooked-friends. Seriously, why can't people just try another thing alongside Facebook? Why do they have to be ride or die facebook-fiends? I digress..

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[-] Adella1961@sh.itjust.works 22 points 1 year ago

I use Facebook and Instagram to post pictures and to stay in contact with friends and family. That being said, I don’t trust Zuck and I believe his intentions will always be to take-over and monetize. When I come to the Fediverse, I expect to see fresh, new, progressive, interesting ideas from the communities I join. And although I am older age-wise, I can see that Meta is tired and out of the loop. I would vote for not federating with Meta.

[-] Sabre363@sh.itjust.works 19 points 1 year ago

If any community of the fediverse willing accepts getting into bed with a major, for-profit corporation, then it does not deserve to be a part of the fediverse. There is zero chance that Facebook (they don't get to simply rebrand) is doing this to be a supportive part of the fediverse. They are doing this because we are a threat to their profits and the best way to kill us is from the inside.

[-] Just_A_Human@sh.itjust.works 18 points 1 year ago

The zucc better keep his sticky fingers away

[-] surfcocktailsynth@sh.itjust.works 18 points 1 year ago

Politics aside (I'm strongly against federating with corps for reasons already expressed here), can the instance even support federation with a multimillion user federation? Just look at the fedilags recently.

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this post was submitted on 06 Jul 2023
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