• BraveSirZaphod@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I mean, did they steal it? Or did people largely willingly give it away? People willingly left the older decentralized platforms in favor of centralized corporate platforms because, for one reason or another, they felt it was a better use of their time. The old-school forums weren’t killed; people stopped using them and left for Reddit and Facebook and Instagram etc.

    If we want to reverse this, we need to understand why this happened, what those service provided that lured people, and how we can build better alternatives, and I think there’s more to this than just “corporation bad”.

    Edit: Downvote if you like, but I’d much prefer an actual response, because I think there is an interesting conversation to be had about this.

    • SpaceCadet2000@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      You can’t really blame this on the people. The centralized platforms offered something that for most people worked a lot better than what was already existing. In the beginning, those corporate platforms were actually quite good so it’s only natural that people flocked to it.

      It’s only after those companies achieved a monopoly in their market, that they started pulling a bait-and-switch and began to enshittify their sites. Network effect makes it so that mass migration to something that’s technically better is unlikely. This bait-and-switch is where they stole it from the people.

      • BraveSirZaphod@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        I’m not really blaming the people here, and I kind of question how useful an exercise blame even really is in this kind of the thing. Being angry at companies for trying to make money isn’t a particularly productive exercise, since that is their entire point, and I’d much rather funnel that energy into building alternatives that are insulated from those pressures. The fact of the matter is that the corporations built something that people wanted, they began using it, and now the monetization is dialing up and sharply degrading the user experience. This was always going to be possible, and they are perfectly within their rights to do what they want with their own platforms, even if it’s shitty. I wouldn’t really characterize this as ‘theft’, though I suppose that’s really a question of semantics. Exploitation of human psychology, perhaps yes.

        But as that experience continues degrading, it does create a big opening for platforms like the Fediverse that aren’t bound to those same monetization incentives. Network effects definitely make transitions difficult, but that’s not insurmountable, and also is much less powerful in anonymous platforms like discussion boards and forums. I think kbin and Lemmy are in a pretty promising position, though there will of course be some growing pains, and it’ll take time for a critical mass of users to arrive and participate in a wide variety of topics.

      • skogens_ro@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Hell yeah you can blame the people. They chose to use those platforms, and they choose to stay with them as they grow ever shittier. They’re the ones enabling platforms like reddit.

    • GataZapata@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      While I think you are right and there are surely factors worth investigating, I cannot shake the feeling that ‘money for ads’ is a really big one.

      To the point: I cannot htelp but notice that the bigger services place emphasis on you presenting, ourself, while small decentralized ones place more import on anonimity. I think there’s a part in all or most people that wants to present themselves and be lauded among peers. This is to me why platforms with photo capability like fb and insta took off. Also reddit was trying to gravitate more and more towards this with following profiles and bla

      • BraveSirZaphod@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        That’s definitely a pretty important distinction, and I’m definitely interested to see if there’ll ever be a federate platform that does emphasize real identities. Growing that would be very hard given the network effects, but TikTok etc show that it is possible, at least.

        • discodoubloon@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          I think PixelFed is going in this direction if I’m not mistaken. Also to your points and which I keep bringing up… you can have both anonymous and Real identities interacting directly with each other here. Of course other social media sites can do this somewhat but they all encourage you to give them as much info as possible.

        • Boz (he/him)
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          1 year ago

          Doesn’t Mastodon do identities? I feel like I’ve seen a lot of people on there doing names and photos. Those may be professional names (pen names, screen names, etc) rather than what’s on their driver’s license, but it still allows them to get direct, personal attention rather than anonymous interaction.

    • lightingnerd@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Of course there’s more to this than “corpo bad”, it’s the economic system that drives these businesses to focus on profit over the quality of the user experience–but I think that’s the core to all the “corpo bad” arguments when you really boil them down. These websites and services have become so ubiquitous for two reasons:

      The first reason, is that people tend towards simplification, if you can give them a centralized location where they can have all their needs met, they prefer it to the effort it takes to use multiple locations/services. A great example is the popularity and convenience of stores like Walmart or Costco where you can do all of your shopping in one quick go. Facebook, Reddit, Twitter, and even YouTube to a lesser degree all offer these one-stop-shop kind-of models by allowing you to connect with a vast amount of people, discuss a large number of topics, and view multiple forms of media. So, unless they have a good reason to remain diversified, people tend towards simplification.

      The second reason is also psychological in nature. These companies, (whom we will refer to as FaRT), have designed and redesigned their entire systems to drive up refresh rates, click-through rates, and otherwise increase advertising visibility. In addition to hacking the addiction mechanisms, and the desire for people to feel important, they take it even further using deception and “dark UI”. Even when you utilize many of the adblocking systems, for example, FaRT inject advertising content directly into the same stream of other user content(the best example is direct corpo sponsorship of big name YouTube content creators, but at-least that money goes directly to the creators). Plus, advertisers are getting much, much better at disguising this content so that you are less likely to skip it before seeing it.

      So it’s a two-sided coin, a major part of the problem is that “corpo bad”, and now that they’re taking it to a degree of harming the public experience for profits (which is why cable television died), it’s our responsibility to step out of our comfort zones and show them that we are willing to inconvenience ourselves a little for a better UX.

      • Peacemeal12@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        There comes a breaking point where people and organizations who are dependent on Facebook ads will actually move from the jaws of this giant corporations for more freedom and control. We are certainly seeing it now by example. I’m someone who just left Reddit and actually am here to invest in this platform and you can’t say well I’m the exception.

    • Lells@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      There were us knowledgeable early adopters who were ridiculed endlessly by … pretty much everybody … who actually worked to build the thing. Then the companies came… and brought with them the ignorant, unthinking majority of the lowest common denominator who believe everything they’re told to believe. I call it stolen. The consumer class that followed the corporations didn’t build this place, nor did they represent what we had built.

      • BraveSirZaphod@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        I get what you’re saying, having just nuked my nearly 12 year old Reddit account yesterday. Things changed a lot, and I’d definitely say most of it was for the worse.

        However, I don’t know if this, for lack of a better term, superiority complex, is particularly helpful The fact is that early adopters and enthusiasts made Reddit a cool and useful platform, and so more and more normal began using it. The only way to prevent that from happening is to make a platform actively unappealing, and I wouldn’t say that’s exactly a good idea. The best thing, IMO, is to stay isolated from monetization incentives and ensure that communities of like-minded people can be formed and interact with each other in a healthy way, both normie and enthusiast.

        I mean, if Reddit today magically became a non-profit, reduced the API fees to cover only costs, and eliminated active monetization schemes, that wouldn’t suddenly revert the user base back to the way it was a decade ago. The presence of the “ignorant unthinking majority of the lowest common denominator who believe everything they’re told” is not dependent on the pursuit of profit.

    • gillrmn@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Most of the old internet platforms which failed were bought by corporations - sometimes to do just that, to shut it off.

      Livejournal was bought by Russia to stop any dissent. Similarly twitter was bought to kill activism which for ultra rich was becoming an issue as it was undoing their lobbying. (forget all the drama over it, thats a smoke screen to hide real issue)

      In the end, only when we leave gluttony and greed behind, and understand the full game - can we have a fair internet. Otherwise there are powerful people with power and money behind them who would like to keep controlling you for their benefit.

    • Tashlan@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Honestly as an early user of Facebook, Reddit, etc., we shouldn’t forget that when people first came to these services, they were the smaller, cleaner, more text-based alternatives to bigger corporate bullshit. Myspace was busy, bloated, Malware prone, Facebook was light and organized. Digg became super corporatized overnight, Reddit was clean and simple. Once early users are on that shit when it’s good, their friends follow, and eventually communities form and it’s very, very difficult if you care about a community to abandon it for an alternative. Websites aren’t just “websites,” they’re people, and just like tech companies eventually always put profits over people, people put people over software. They’ll put up with a lot of shit to stay on touch woth the people they loved.

    • CIWS-30@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I upvoted you, but I think some people just downvote and move on not because they 100% disagree with you, but because they don’t quite have the time to post a detailed reply, and they’re probably hoping someone else does on their behalf, which they will upvote if it’s close to what they’re trying to say.

      Not enough hours in a day to type out a detailed response to a downvote (or even upvotes) when you have so many other things on your plate. I’m guessing they were trying to say something like, “I didn’t choose to leave decentrazlied platforms, I’m still on them. Everyone else did, I had to follow them if I wanted to keep in touch with my family and friends.”

      But that’s just a stab in the dark, honestly.

  • richardazia@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    With Kbin, Calckey, Mastodon, lemmy, Hugo and more we can. We don’t need to be trapped within the social media giants, especially after what happened to Instagram, Twitter, and now Reddit. Now is the time when we need to revert to the habit of using community websites, rather than social media giants.

    • kdegeek@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I am absolutely loving Calckey. I was on Mastodon before, and wasn’t wild about its UI, but Calckey is SO PRETTY

    • ArugulaZ@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      CalcKey sounds like accounting software. That’s the next big thing in microblogging, though?

  • cyborganism@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Absolutely.

    The internet has become basically a handful of sites on which people share these sites’ publications It’s become some kind of meta feedback loop.

  • PabloDiscobar@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I don’t want to be “this guy”, but what we have here is a screenshot of a Tweet post without even a link or a date. It’s the best way to go back to the same old system that we have left behind us. This is whitepeopletwitter in a nutshell.

    Edit, seriously it looks like you framed a “motivation speech”. Just post the link to the text, don’t screenshot a text, we cannot do anything with it. We have the tools now, use them

    • johnson_waters@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      fyi you can get to people’s profiles via kbin.social/u/username like on reddit

      also it’s just a comment with someone’s opinion. what is the issue exactly

      • PabloDiscobar@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        No. Look at the image again, we don’t have the instance of the user.

        also it’s just a comment with someone’s opinion. what is the issue exactly

        It’s a motivation speech. Add a parrot and you have an “advice animals”. Have you not noticed how reddit became this repository of snapshot of Tweets and tiktioks? That’s what you want?

        • thanevim@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          I hear what you’re saying, and I understand why it’s generally a good idea to offer a permalink to the tweet/post/whatever.

          That being said, there’s been instances (especially with regards to certain politicians on Twitter) where having the screenshot has been paramount, as the original post gets deleted.

          So we’re left with a few choices as I see it:

          1. Link the original post and be done with it. Risk of the original post being deleted, making your post useless.

          2. Link a screenshot. You could add the link to the original post in the comments

          3. Link an archive version. A great idea, but sets an expectation for the average user to have to copy the link to the post, go to the wayback machine, add a manual snapshot, then make a kbin/Lemmy/whatever post to the archived snapshot

          • PabloDiscobar@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            But look at what we lose in the process of screenshooting a post:

            • We cannot write an answer to the OP
            • We have no follow-up of the conversation started by the original post
            • OP cannot edit his screenshot
            • OP cannot answer our discussion
            • OP doesn’t even know that his post is discussed elsewhere
            • We have no connection with OP between our instance and his.

            In short, we have lost all the advantages of the fediverse, for what? For the graphics, for the white on black background which reminds of Twitter. It’s a terrible trade.

            That being said, there’s been instances (especially with regards to certain politicians on Twitter) where having the screenshot has been paramount, as the original post gets deleted.

            Editing what you said is a right. You have the right to change your opinion. It’s in fact a virtue. If you see something interesting in the comment, use the symbol and edit your post, and say that you changed your mind.

            Link the original post and be done with it. Risk of the original post being deleted, making your post useless.

            I like it. If you think you posted by mistake, if there was a misunderstanding or if you fucked up… well, I think it’s a good idea that the fediverse allows you to make things right.

            Link a screenshot. You could add the link to the original post in the comments

            Forget the screenshots. It’s like using binary with git.

            Just make it live, use the fediverse as it is supposed to be used and see where it leads us. We’ll see how Ernest & Co can make something based on the fediverse which makes the process way more fluent and intuitive.

          • Boz (he/him)
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            1 year ago
            1. Do whatever you like with respect to the original post, but put a transcript of the text in your post. That way, you don’t have to worry about the source being deleted, and visually impaired people have an easier time reading the text. (Bonus points if you add a brief verbal description of any photos or drawings that are relevant, for people using screen readers).
      • AnonTwo@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Without a date or any way to source the comment, it could be something from 2-3 years ago.

        Obviously it’s not in this case, but it’s a very real issue on reddit (in fact there was a post recently) of people debating topics that were being reposted by bots from several years ago. Basically it lets people dredge up old, already talked about topics without bringing any recent relevance to the topic.

      • vividspecter@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        If I remember right, ABP is the one that was taking payments from companies to let through their advertisements. Ublock origin is free and open source and doesn’t have any of that.

  • therealcaptncrunch67@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Instead of reddit use Kbin/Lemmy

    Instead of twitter use Mastodon

    Instead of YouTube use Peertube/Odysee

    By the way, we should stop using imgur for pictures

  • lozunn@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Definitely agree with the sentiment in the comment.

    Though, how ironic is it that this post might as well have been generated by a bot?
    Literally a screenshot of a comment without attribution and with an account 2 hours old…

  • broken_arrow@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    AI can scrape data from fediverse sites too, no?

    I prefer this over Reddit, but we’re not solving that problem.

  • ArugulaZ@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I’m just angry that we’re basically being led down the trail of tears to a nerd barrio. You despicable bastards! We BUILT the internet! Now you take it away from us?!