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Shit. it's even worse than I thought!
May 22 Β· 3 months ago
π flipperzero Β· May 22 at 06:08:
Do it! You wonβt regret it. The small net is becoming w I d e. Also curious, happened with blue sky? Just cause the dude who founded twitter that was giving it green light reneged and gave blessing to whack ass X instead? I mean for all intents and purposes, F@&$ that guy anyways cuz he donβt mean shit ehehe BUT if it ainβt that Iβd love to know. -w- GL HF on your Gemini expedition!
π drh3xx Β· May 22 at 07:50:
I dropped Facebook and LinkedIn a good year or so. Yes I've lost touch with some people but still one of the best decisions I've made.
π» darkghost Β· May 22 at 09:43:
It's refreshing to post here and know I'm not training some AI algorithm.
π gritty Β· May 22 at 10:39:
Like stack, I've been nearly 100% Gemini for a couple years. dropped all main stream social media 6 or 7 years ago. I check masto like once a quarter, if that.
π gritty Β· May 22 at 11:26:
btw, the people who really matter still reach me despite no social media. I share pictures and video with my family via Signal groups.
π₯οΈ zetamacs Β· May 22 at 14:33:
I think one of the best things about doing that is how much of your attention can go back to offline things.
"Mostly text" isn't particularly distracting and, usually, it doesn't find you.
What kind of life will you live with that time back? I look forward to finding out.
π² Half_Elf_Monk Β· May 22 at 14:34:
I'm in my foruth year off of Big Social. It's been rather freeing. Based on watching people go from fb/twttr > masto/fedi > ???, I suspect that it's better to build new/better habits (i.e., contemplation, paper books, touch grass, talk to real people in my real community), rather than chase after "better" places to consume info-feeds.
π² Half_Elf_Monk Β· May 22 at 14:34:
@darkghost - Sorry to be that guy, but... out of curiousity, what makes you think that the smolweb *isn't* being scraped for AI training data? I doubt smol-site admins care to do that, but it wouldn't be hard for anyone else to do. Other than a perhaps low value ROI on setting up the scraper, I don't see why this couldn't already be happening. :(
π°οΈ lufte Β· May 22 at 17:38:
I'm still not convinced that centralized and small is better than federated and big. Of course federation implies that everyone can federate, including the big guys. As long as everybody can play and they don't try to ruin the game for everyone else, I don't see a problem with it.
π stack Β· May 22 at 17:44:
@Lufte, do you think Gemini is more centralized than any if the federated communities?
π°οΈ lufte Β· May 22 at 18:09:
I was thinking more specifically about the social communities we have working on top of gemini, like BBS and Station. They're completely centralized as far as I know.
π stack Β· May 22 at 19:00:
@lufte That is true. Social interaction tends to be centralized here and elsewhere, including meat space... The dreaded network effect draws us to places with more people, and eventually it becomes the only place. But it is possible to have BBS-like forums with posts themselves distributed, residing on user's machines... You can even do it on BBS, (one could make this more integrated, right, @skyjake?). This would at least preserve the main content, should something go wrong with BBS
π requiem Β· May 22 at 19:33:
Building better habits becomes easier with better platforms. I find Mastodon doesnβt suck me in as badly as Twitter did and I get a much broader variety of voices as the algo isnβt tweaked to keep you hooked and in an echo chamber. Secure Scuttlebutt is even saner in this regard, and the fact that you *have to* follow random people and rely on them for getting updates from everyone else too makes for a healthier community.
Problem with social media isnβt, in my eyes, that it exists, but what greed has turned the mainstream into. Healthy social media can be a great help, even if just as a halfway-house to even healthier lifestyles.
π stack Β· May 22 at 22:00:
Hm... I think my comment was censored, as I don't see it. I surely hope not, as it would absolutely point out the problem with centralization generally and BBS in particular.
In my response I pointed out that it is important to not get stuck in a bubble where all you see is reflections of your own opinions.
I don't think it is controversial or incendiary to state that that Gemini tends to be left leaning; nor that extreme opinions from either side tend to be foolish. I sincerely hope that I somehow messed up with my post and it was not removed.
π satch Β· May 22 at 23:52:
@admin could you please notify users when their posts are removed due to moderation decisions? I don't think I need to explain why that's important.
β freezr [OP] Β· May 23 at 03:00:
@stack
Total enshittification... π©
You can read more here:
β β https://wedistribute.org/2024/03/extending-activitypub/
β freezr [OP] Β· May 23 at 03:06:
π²
πΉοΈ skyjake [mod...] Β· May 23 at 04:09:
@stack @satch I've taken no moderation actions here.
stack, check if you can see the comment in your index:
I should probably add an automatic notification when one's post or comment gets deleted by the admin/moderator, so there is no confusion.
π stack Β· May 23 at 05:04:
I don't see it there... Maybe I somehow failed to send it...
β freezr [OP] Β· May 23 at 08:48:
Thanks guys the partecipation at my post, was amazing... I do not have flesh & bone friends to talk about nerdy topics, that's why for me is a real challenge turning off the Fediverse... However I am getting closer to taking this resolution... π€
π MrSVCD Β· May 23 at 09:40:
This post made me wanting to try use my Amiga 500 only for a week.
β freezr [OP] Β· May 23 at 13:31:
Why not?
This proxy by auragem (I guess) does a really good job in translating web pages into gemini capsules...
π stack Β· May 23 at 16:18:
Apologies for suggesting sensorship here, I am now certain it was my error.
π norayr Β· May 25 at 00:55:
very interesting thread, thank you for starting it.
so i think that there are no social networks in the net other than the net itself. the term 'social network' was invented by corporations to promote their nodes on the net, not the network. i know you all know it, but let me state it again, the corporations, that are interested mainly in revenue, need to bring more and more people to their nodes. when the node is being sold, thats the users, not the servers or programs that cost so much. because the users afraid to loose connections.
now, why do they afraid? my answer is education.
i think we as societies failed tech education. companies that make money in the internet don't need tech education. they need the opposite: users that aftraid to loose the communication, because they don't know there is a way to keep in touch without holy corporation making it possile.
there was a comment that leaving the web or 'social networks' allowed to communicate only with closer people. while communicating with close people is y definition normal i. e. close people are those you communicate with often and more openly, that doesn't mean we should not communicate with others.
being out of of corporate service (lets not call it a network) or even activity pu, doesnt mean we cannot socialize over the internet.
so i think the internet is the network, ant the network is for all kinds of exchanges, so it is social network made by and for social animal.
and by saying internet i dont mean the web, i dont mean w3c.
so how internet enables communication? it is so natural for people to share, publish something for others. that can be lyrics of the song. can be daily experiences in different forms, be it a blog or gemlog, or video or audio.
so early adopters of the internet learned how to share without the help of unexisting back then corporate solutions.
later people were exposed to services, to ads, then to tracking and privacy violations, etc.
why? because they didnt know how to setup an own web page or gopher hole.
later they didnt know that it could be possible to write from whatsapp to gtalk, since both were operatong by xmpp, but the corporations restricted the freedom to communicate. thus people were running one yahoo messenger one aim one netmeeting, one icq. i remember how long would it take to load it all on someone's computer, who was complaining that it is slow.
the obvious sign that we aren't educated, ready for the digital age is how 'google' or 'photoshop' became a verb.
to me it was always weird. i never wanted to give this acknowledgement to the corporation and the exact product, and since i was exposed to the internet, i was always using words like 'search' or 'edit' and never mentioned exact product.
so we need to be able to do some basic things on the net.
these functions are not hard to automate, so we did, and rss or syndication wasn't invented by capital.
we could have our home pages, blogs, comments, syndication without depending on big tech. some of us could, but most of us didnt even know how to approach new technologies. literally, how to approach the computer, how to turn it on, how to move the mouse. no wonder people didnt know how to setup their home on the internet.
so, i think education is the problem.
second problem is that people are in need of other people, and if it takes having an account on instagram or twitter or whatever, to be connected - they will do that, in spite of understanding the problems this dependency brings.
i think in this situation having an alternative like activity pub is a blessing. well it always depends what you compare to but we have to compare it to the world where the communication is practically done by critical majority of people by utilizing corporate services.
people even sat 'what messenger do you use', and for them it is so hard to comprehend that the protocol is the standard, and then there can be many different clients that implement the spec.
so now on specs.
in a world where people use web almost exclusively and dont know that internet and the web arent synonims, the spec is highly influenced by corporations.
similar thing happened to c++, the spec is so hard that only a couple of rich industry players are able to produce thei own c++ compilers.
even embarcadero is not able to maintain their own c++ compiler, they cannot keep up with the speed features are added to the language spec.
same with web browsers. nobody can implement a browser from scratch anymore. even microsoft gave up. we only have google's browser, and mozilla's browser because google is kind enough to pay to mozilla.
no wonder that when i am building my gentoo, i get working environment in a couple of hours, but building chromium would take more than a day. the spec is the problem.
and the spec exists in part to satisfy some of us, to make it possible for them to have the features, they don't always need. but they want. they want this feature on that website. there is no other way, they need it.
and this eagerness, aim for features, plus competition which forces to release early but dirt written code, makes the tech complicated, buggy, not secure, etc.
but that eagerness, the desire for more, is in part because people want it. some of them, if educated better, maybe wouldnt want, but many still would.
so even floss projects are on the way of adding features and 'competing' with commercial solutions. because we are not ready to accept something less polished, less capable.
and here where gemini comes, it is an answer to the feature richness by extreme ascetism, by opposing the way things go by suggesting something that is radically different.
i need to say, it is very close to me. thats also why i love oberon or architecture without unnecessary features.
π norayr Β· May 25 at 01:08:
on ai which gathers information.
why wouldn't it gather data on gemini? if we have enough data to interest them, they will get the data. and thats okay, since what we publish is public.
most of you, i guess, prefer bsd licenses to gpl. how then are you opposed ai learning on your publicly shared data?
(i prefer gpl, i dont understand bsd)
π norayr Β· May 25 at 01:10:
i think diaspora as protocol for decentralized communication and syndication is much better designed than activity pub. it is smaller, more understandable,more clean, more implementable. i dont like that reference implementation is done in ruby, but well, webdevs are those who started decentralized web movement, and they used their tools.
π norayr Β· May 25 at 01:12:
i guess if i told you there is an activity pub project which presents data to you via gemini, it won't iterest you.
π stack Β· May 25 at 01:30:
Well, education is good, but the network effect is a real thing, and then there is the convenience. If I leave BBS, I will lose contact with the people here, unless I painstakingly contact each one and get their email address or whatever. For regular people, there is no arguing against something like Instagram or Facebook -- not because of education, but because no one wants to dick around in a place with 200 unknown people -- instead of one with all your friends and relatives and everyone you've ever known and some really cool celebrities or whatever.
Unless you are looking for a place with 200 people, and most people just aren't.
I'm not making an argument _for_ corporate networks, just pointing out _why_ the big ones formed early will be dominant, no matter how abusive. Look at X!
As for licenses, my biggest concern is that someone will take my work, patent it and prevent me from using it.
I don't care what anyone does with it, as long as they don't fuck with me. If they want to run a business and make money with it, good luck.
I don't like people with guns threatening me if I don't publish changes to their code, so GPL is out. It also seems like GPL is a good way to make sure that no one but politicians and really crooked corporations will make money in tech.
π dimkr Β· May 25 at 07:44:
If you want to restrict your time in the web, hide in geminispace as much as possible but still connect with your fedi friends, you can use gemini://hd.206267.xyz or https://github.com/dimkr/tootik
β freezr [OP] Β· May 25 at 10:33:
@norayr you wrote too much... π
I liked your interpretation about the educational issues, but for me it is a part of a broader issue.
Regarding Gemini + fediverse, there are two methods:
π norayr Β· May 25 at 10:51:
stack, yes bbs is not decentralized enough (yet?). syndication works, but you cannot comment/feedback by not being on this bbs, from the bbs you host, or by being presented as someone@someplace. i opened a discussion regarding decentralization and used openid as an example but not many was interested, and surprisingly, many were opposed.
and yes, i wrote a lot, and it feels limiting on gemini space that practically we cannot feedback on gemlogs. i read things every day, and i cannot feedback. maybe if i was able to, i wouldn't write such a long text here.
π norayr Β· May 25 at 11:17:
well i published another piece of software recently, and again under gpl-3.
i am perfectly fine with you and everybody building my source and selling it, and gpl does not forbid it. it only says, if you made an improvement, publish it, dont take the improvement away from the community, because if i knew you would not share with us your improvement, i wouldn't want to share the source code with you. i dont point a gun at anybody, i think what gpl enforces is a fair expectation of respect of others' work.
π dimkr Β· May 25 at 13:08:
What is it that do don't like about ActivityPub? I can see reasons why a user wouldn't like Mastodon (its UI, its feature set, bugs that don't get fixed, etc') or an implementation of ActivityPub (because federation is unreliable, etc'). But what is it about the protocol itself that you don't like?
β freezr [OP] Β· May 25 at 14:05:
@dimkr I don't have any technical reasons to explain, besides the fact that by design AP is meant for one-on-one interaction. But I know that from now on AP will be shaped to be what Meta and other corporations want.
I am always been a fan of Diaspora, not sure if the diaspora-protocol is enough plastic to offer the variety of platform AP does, maybe it can, but Diaspora is a full community project, while, AP is a project baked by the W3C, and this is an institution that I don't trust anymore, and therefore I don't trust AP.
π dimkr Β· May 25 at 16:39:
@freezr This is not accurate, most ActivityPub implementations support the sharedInbox property. If you're on server A and have 1000 followers on server B and 1000 more on C, A sends only 2 requests when you write a post: one to B and one to C (not one request per follower).
π norayr Β· May 25 at 16:50:
i like diaspora, but believe me the community has its own problems. lets say admin community forces some podmins to ban some users, and they threaten podmins by banning their pods.
β freezr [OP] Β· May 26 at 03:36:
@norayr never heard anything of this... π€·ββοΈ
β freezr [OP] Β· May 26 at 03:41:
@dimkr what I meant is when you interact with someone only this person gets a reply plus the ones you mentioned, all the others don't, on Diaspora/Hubzilla/Friendica all the people involved in a thread are informed and can reply to all without the need to mention anyone. This is a feature that some want to add to ActivityPub.
π stack Β· May 26 at 04:19:
@norayr: With GPL if you are running a business, you are taking on a liability and will have to constantly explain to investors why you are publishing the work they are paying for. And making sure some fool doesn't commit company secrets or racist jokes into the public repo. I would definitely avoid it if possible.
Or find a way to comply without complying. Years ago I had to work with an early version of gcc on the arm. The toolchain was maintained by a company that sold an expensive version and a year later would update the source to comply. I don't think you could even compile it: the make file was hardwired to some guy's machine...
Intellectual property is a joke. If you want control, don't publish. Once it's out, you can't tell people what to do with it without pointing a gun at them.
π dimkr Β· May 26 at 04:56:
@freezr That's also inaccurate, some ActivityPub implementations ignore https://www.w3.org/TR/activitypub/#inbox-forwarding and that's why only thread participants can see replies. For example, tootik forwards all replies in a thread to followers of the user who started the thread (with depth limit). It's an implementation issue, not a problem with the protocol itself.
π dimkr Β· May 26 at 05:01:
@freezr If you're talking about mentioning somebody in a reply vs. not mentioning, and the notification Mastodon shows if you do, that's 100% a Mastodon thing. ActivityPub doesn't define how notifications should work, and not all implementations insist on you mentioning somebody for them to get notified or receive the reply. Maybe you just don't like Mastodon π
β freezr [OP] Β· May 26 at 05:39:
Absolutely I don't like mastodon... At all...
β freezr [OP] Β· May 26 at 05:53:
@dimkr I didn't read the specification, I don't believe I am even able to understand it... Perhaps Mastodon, since took over all the AP projects, inducted me to have a bad opinion about it...
The point is before the AP protocol there were also the diaspora protocol, the friendica protocol, the hubzilla protocol , however on the internet always prevails what the W3C decides...
Well, after the scandal of the DRM inside the HTML5 the W3C is not credible anymore as a "super partes" entity... For me can be erased anytime, as well as anything it does or promotes...
π dimkr Β· May 26 at 06:52:
@freezr Nobody should read the specification because nobody *really* follows it - Mastodon ignores big parts, adds stuff (like HTTP signatures) and everybody implements their own, quirky but compatible-enough variant of ActivityPub. But ActivityPub itself seems fine to me: without insulting those who wrote this long specification, at the end of the day it's just a bunch of JSONs over HTTPS. Mastodon's *implementation* is the problem most of the time: the biggest fedi instances are Mastodon and sometimes they don't pass posts to other instances, don't show a reply without mention, ... they coerce other software and users to mimic Mastodon's implementation quirks.
β freezr [OP] Β· May 26 at 06:54:
@dmkir and this does Mastond with 10M users, now try to figure what is going to do Threads with its 150M users... π©
π dimkr Β· May 26 at 07:03:
@freezr I bet Threads follows the Mastodon 'dialect' of ActivityPub, and I think that people should calm down, limit post audience and block users+instances they don't like if they don't want their posts to feed AI/trackers. Threads won't 'break' the fediverse unless instances with viral posts don't have enough disk space, bandwidth and database compute to handle the extra load - for people who aren't social media influencers and don't follow such people, it probably won't be a problem πΌ
π nimalo_ Β· Jun 05 at 17:16:
@freezr
What do you don't like with Mastodon? I am curious to have a different opinion, as a user of Mastodon
Edit: I am sorry, I talked before reading. I didn't saw that you already answered this question.
π norayr Β· Jun 06 at 01:59:
freezr, i wanted to feedback on what you've said that bufore activity pub there were different protocols: diaspora, friendica, hubzilla, etc, and then the w3c ap dominated.
my understanding is, from what i have read and remember about the history of the fediverse, is that all the people behind those decentralized social networks gathered together to design a new protocol, and asked if w3c would agree to host the protocol group under their umbrella, since they pass jsons via http.
diaspora devs decided to not participate. that's why all adopted the protocol except diaspora.
but it's not rike w3c pushed something or had an interest to push something. they just agreed to give their name basically.
π norayr Β· Jun 06 at 02:00:
btw how does that go/feel?
β freezr [OP] Β· Jun 06 at 03:08:
@norayr I have totally different memories. W3C stepped in because the relative success of Diaspora, Friendica and Hubzilla, with Diaspora being the most diffuse.
The problem with the W3C and Diaspora, for what I can remember, were determined by the fact that Diaspora asked to be the protocol.
In the same period the W3C was working to find a solution or a resolution regarding the DRM.
And that is when became clear that the W3C was just another tool in the hands of GAFAM and the fact that any internet thing must obey to the W3C will.
π Going full Gemini β Since I am extremely disappointed by the weird course of ActivityPub, Mastodon, Threads and BlueSky... I am seriously considering to do 30 or even 60 days challenge using exclusively Gemini for my online social activities... π€
π¬ freezr Β· 55 comments Β· 12 likes Β· May 22 Β· 3 months ago