This account is being kept for the posterity, but it won’t see further activity past February.

If you want to contact me, I’m at /u/lvxferre@mander.xyz

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Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: April 9th, 2021

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  • Let’s go simpler: what if your instance was allowed to copy the fed/defed lists from other instances, and use them (alongside simple Boolean logic plus if/then statements) to automatically decide who you’re going to federate/defederate with? That would enable caracoles and fedifams for admins who so desire, but also enable other organically grown relations.

    For example. Let’s say that you just joined the federation. And there are three instances that you somewhat trust:

    • Alice - it defederates only really problematic instances.
    • Bob and Charlie - both are a bit prone to defederate other instances on a whim, but when both defed the same instance it’s usually problematic.

    Then you could set up your defederation rules like this:

    • if Alice defed it, then defed it too.
    • else, if (Bob defed it) and (Charlie defed it), then defed it too.
    • else, federate with it.

    Of course, that would require distinguishing between manual and automatic fed/defed. You’d be able to use the manual fed/defed from other instances to create your automatic rules, to avoid deadlocks like “Alice is blocking it because Bob is blocking it, and Bob is blocking it because Alice is doing it”.


  • Do tell me more of how Old People are not the target of discrimination¹, yout’².

    You’re 1) distorting what I said, and 2) being an assumer.

    Discrimination can happen against any group. However, it’s considerably worse when it’s geared towards marginalised groups, as they have less ways to deal with it. That makes your analogy with a racial group (black people) a lot flawed.

    Note, I do not think that insults against old people are “cool”. However they’re considerably less worse than insults towards black people.

    The links that you’ve posted - that you clearly didn’t even bother to read yourself - are evidence of discrimination in a very specific environment (workplace). They are not evidence of marginalisation.






  • They’re still providing the code for people who buy the compiled software. And they are not restricting their ability to redistribute that code. So it’s still compliant with the GPL in the letter. However, if you redistribute it, they’ll refuse to service you further versions of the software.

    It’s clearly a loophole because they can argue “ackshyually, we didn’t restrict you, we just don’t want further businesses with you, see ya sucker”.


  • Lvxferre@lemmy.mltoOpen Source@lemmy.mlThoughts on Post-Open Source?
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    6 months ago

    I think that the RHEL example is out-of-place, since IBM (“Red Hat”) is clearly exploiting a loophole of the GNU Public License. Similar loopholes have been later addressed by e.g. the AGPL and the GPLv3*, so I expect this one to be addressed too.

    So perhaps, if the GPL is “not enough”, the solution might be more GPL.

    *note that the license used by the kernel is GPLv2. Cue to Android (for all intents and purposes non-free software) using the kernel, but not the rest.



  • This text made me realise something: “defed or not defed” discussions are ultimately rushed.

    Because at the end of the day, most Mastodon instances might defed Threads. Not due to Facebook’s help in genocides or because they’re a big corp, but simply because admins will say “screw it, 90% of rule violations come from Threads users, I’m not dealing with this shit.”


  • Most people don’t even know what’s a proprietary image format. From their PoV it would be “shitty broken Mastodon doesn’t show images properly”. And they would still pressure Mastodon users to switch.

    if Threads won’t display in a browser they’ve just blown one of their legs off.

    I’m not sure but I think that a similar strategy could work for browsers, using a web plugin.

    But even if Meta decided that Threads is unavailable from browsers, it wouldn’t be blowing one of Threads’ legs off. There are far more mobile than desktop users nowadays; and if they want to EEE the Fediverse, they need numbers for that.


  • Note: I did read your comment fully, but I’m going to address specific points, otherwise the discussion gets too long. (Sorry!)

    “Some data format” is still a pretty vague handwave […]

    It is vague because there are multiple ways for Threads to screw with the Fediverse through data formats. But if you want a more specific example:

    Let’s say that Meta creates a new image format called TREDZ. It fills the same purpose as JPG, but it’s closed source. The Threads app has native support for TREDZ images, but your browser doesn’t render it.

    If you access a Mastodon instance through Threads, everything works well, since the Threads app has support for other image formats. However, since your browser and current Mastodon apps have no support for TREDZ, pics in this format fail to render. You get broken content as a result, and probably some Threads crowds screeching at you because you ignored their picture, saying “u uze mastadon? lmaaao its broken it doesnt even pictures lol”, encouraging you to ditch your instance to join Threads instead.

    And you might say “reverse engineer TREDZ, problem solved”. However:

    • reverse engineering is costly and time-consuming
    • Meta has professional coders in a paycheck, Mastodon relies mostly on volunteers
    • Meta could easily encumber TREDZ with all sorts of nasty legal shit, like parents, and aggressively defend them.

    As such, on a practical level, it would be not feasible to reverse-engineer TREDZ. And even if it was, the time necessary to do so is time that Threads is still causing damage to Mastodon.

    Of course, this is just an example that I made up on the spot. Meta can think on more efficient ways to do so.

    I’m sure that Meta would just love to be able to push a button that made all their competitors die. […]

    Yup. As you said, everyone wants that button. But due to the difference in power, Meta is closer to get that button than Mastodon is.

    the Fediverse seems pretty solid against attack to me.

    The protocol might be solid, but the community isn’t. Communities stronger than the Fediverse died; and the Fediverse has the mixed blessing of decentralisation - the death of a part doesn’t drag the other parts to the grave, but the survival of the other parts doesn’t help much the dying one either.


  • The difference is the same as between boiling a frog* by throwing it in hot water, versus throwing it in cold water and heating it slowly.

    In the defederated scenario, people resist to ditch Mastodon and go to Threads, for ideological reasons. The only ones who’d do it are the ones who are pissed at Twitter alone, and short-sighted enough to not realise that the issue with Twitter applies to traditional social media as a whole.

    In the federated scenario, however, that resistance has been slowly degraded. Because Mastodon users are already interacting with Threads users, forging social bonds with them, and they’ll try to avoid to lose those bonds.

    I’m more worried about the load if it truly gets big and mastodon and threads interact a lot, tbh.

    I’m a bit worried about this, too. You toot something, it gets insanely popular, and now Threads users hug your instance to death, the old Slashdot effect.

    *inb4 boiled frogs are bad science, but a good analogy.



  • Sorry for the wall of text.

    What specific features do you have in mind that could be implemented in a closed-source manner that couldn’t be reverse-engineered and implemented by open-source instance software too?

    The features don’t need to be impossible to reverse engineer; they could be costly enough to do so, rely on other FB/Meta platforms, or demand server capabilities past what you’d expect from typical Mastodon instances. For example:

    • implementing some data format that is decoded by the front-end
    • allowing you to access content from FB/IG/WhatsApp from Threads
    • “we now allow big arse videos”.

    and it’s unclear what benefit it would serve Meta that they can’t accomplish by just not joining the Fediverse in the first place.

    Killing a bird and a baby mammoth with a single stone, before they grow and invade your turf.

    On one side you have Twitter/X; it bleeds money and Musk is an idiot, but he has enough money to throw at the problems until they go away, and he has a “vishun” about an “errything app” that would clearly compete with FB/IG/WhatsApp. On another you have the Fediverse; it’s small and negligible but it has potential for unrestricted growth, and already includes things like Matrix (that competes with WhatsApp) and Friendica (that competes with FB).

    From Meta’s point of view, Twitter/X is by far the biggest threat. It could be addressed without federation, but by doing so would feed Mastodon, and a stronger Mastodon means a stronger Fediverse and this power would put Matrix, Friendica etc. in a better position. With federation however they can EEE one while killing another, and still advertise the whole thing as “I don’t understand, why you say that we have a monopoly over online communication? We’re even part of a federation? Meta plays nice with competitors. I’m so confused~”.