@dansup We're stronger together, Dan. It's not worth throwing stones.
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@thisismissem @evan @dansup @quillmatiq What developers love is not a great metric as becomes apparent if you follow the tech industry for a while.
@ikuturso @evan @dansup @quillmatiq well, you need developers to want to build great social experiences on protocols for any given protocol to succeed. They need to be productive to deliver the features regular people want, if the protocol prevents that, or doesn't provide what developers want, they'll do something else.
So yes, people first if we're looking at it from a product perspective; but if we're looking at it from a technological perspective, then yeah, it's developers you need to keep happy, so they can keep end-users of their software happy.
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@renchap @evan @quillmatiq @dansup rich people who believe in the vision and want to see the future you're promising. They might not expect a 10x return, but let's not kid ourselves, they're putting in because there's something in it for them and they get a nice tax write-off.
If your donors stop donating because they no longer believe in the vision/team/etc, then that'll limit the project. You need these wealthy donors to stay happy, as much as Bluesky PBC needs their investors to stay happy.
Wealthy people with money to give/invest in support of a future you've sold them.
@thisismissem @renchap @evan @quillmatiq @dansup you do still agree there is a massive difference between a donation and an investment right?
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@thisismissem @renchap @evan @quillmatiq @dansup you do still agree there is a massive difference between a donation and an investment right?
@ikuturso @renchap @evan @quillmatiq @dansup it's really not that massive. It's still money from a billionaire.
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@ikuturso @renchap @evan @quillmatiq @dansup it's really not that massive. It's still money from a billionaire.
@thisismissem @renchap @evan @quillmatiq @dansup If all billionaire money is equally bad, then the incentive structure doesnโt matter. Thatโs a strange position for anyone worried about the power of money.
Donors can express priorities, sure. That's soft influence. But itโs voluntary and reversible. Investments hard-code priorities into ownership, control, and profit-extraction rights.
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@mastodonmigration @baralheia @cwebber in Christine's article (and I've just spoken with her about it), it assumes a network topology that does not exist in the real world.
It assumes that every user is on a different pds, and every user runs a full network relay. The reality is that multiple users are usually on a single PDS, and there's only like 12 relays.
- 2 from bluesky (+ 1 deprecated)
- 2 from hose.cam
- 1 from blacksky
- 1 from upcloud
- 3 from firehose.networkplus a few more from various people.
In the ActivityPub ecosystem for every user to message every other user, you need connections between 30,000 servers.
For the same in AT Protocol, you need connections between N PDS to one or more relays (most use the bluesky relay, which others get their list of PDSes from).
@thisismissem @mastodonmigration @baralheia My analysis assumes a network architecture in which each node is a major participant in the functionality of the network, because as I argue in the piece, from a power distribution perspective of decentralization, it is important. What I describe in the piece is that if you want more than a pantheon of gods-eye view participants, then not having addressed delivery means that the system can't scale down.
And this is true: you can run a gotosocial node that isn't *dependent* on other major players in the network, and it scales down great.
The question is whether or not that matters and is important to people. Maybe it doesn't, I don't know. It matters to me, though.
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@thisismissem @mastodonmigration @baralheia My analysis assumes a network architecture in which each node is a major participant in the functionality of the network, because as I argue in the piece, from a power distribution perspective of decentralization, it is important. What I describe in the piece is that if you want more than a pantheon of gods-eye view participants, then not having addressed delivery means that the system can't scale down.
And this is true: you can run a gotosocial node that isn't *dependent* on other major players in the network, and it scales down great.
The question is whether or not that matters and is important to people. Maybe it doesn't, I don't know. It matters to me, though.
@thisismissem @mastodonmigration @baralheia I also think that the ATmosphere and the fediverse could both learn a lot from each other. ATproto could adopt directed messaging, and the fediverse could adopt content addressing and portable identity, both of which I believe are important. This isn't a pivot, I have been saying these things *since 2017*, before ActivityPub became a recommendation, and before ATproto even came on the scene, including even in my co-proposal with Jay Graeber about what Bluesky could be, and including in the articles referenced previously.
Unfortunately, I think there is a real risk that the fediverse is going to learn the *wrong* lessons from the ATmosphere, and adopt some of its "shared centralization" components, rather than the decentralization components that ATproto has that the fediverse doesn't yet. :\
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@thisismissem @mastodonmigration @baralheia I also think that the ATmosphere and the fediverse could both learn a lot from each other. ATproto could adopt directed messaging, and the fediverse could adopt content addressing and portable identity, both of which I believe are important. This isn't a pivot, I have been saying these things *since 2017*, before ActivityPub became a recommendation, and before ATproto even came on the scene, including even in my co-proposal with Jay Graeber about what Bluesky could be, and including in the articles referenced previously.
Unfortunately, I think there is a real risk that the fediverse is going to learn the *wrong* lessons from the ATmosphere, and adopt some of its "shared centralization" components, rather than the decentralization components that ATproto has that the fediverse doesn't yet. :\
@cwebber
@thisismissem @mastodonmigration @baralheia Content addressing and portable identity is so important and hurts so much everytime a server closes or (like me) had to switch domain name. -
@thisismissem @mastodonmigration @quillmatiq @dansup @evan I appreciate this information, but my main interest in modern decentralized social media protocols is for social media (microblogging, as well as picture & video sharing), and I am not a developer - just a nerd. My primary concern in all of this is I simply don't trust Bluesky PBLLC. That's why complete and total independence from their infrastructure from a microblogging standpoint is important to me before I would ever consider using an ATproto-based service as my primary social media platform. While I'm okay using community resources for now, I *want* the ability to host my own completely independent full stack so I would never need to rely on a company or community to stand up a relay or AppView or something. I can do that easily and *cheaply* today with Mastodon or WAFRN (the ActivityPub side of it, anyway) or Pixelfed or Loops - it's not a big lift because these platforms were already designed with the full stack as a single deployment. This makes the network highly resistant to adversarial takeover, especially as things exist *right now*. It's a far, far, far bigger lift to stand up a similarly independent full stack of Bluesky (for example), and far far far easier for the majority of the network to be compromised if all statuses must be funneled through corporate or community chokepoints.
Tl;dr if I can't easily host a full stack that can run completely on it's own (while still being able to federate with others), that's not independence. *Every* service built on top of ActivityPub can give me that independence *by design*. It's the difference between human-scale networking and corporate-scale networking.
If there's an easy, lightweight, fully independent way for me to participate in Bluesky-compatible microblogging on ATproto with an experience that is comparable to what I'd get from using Bluesky directly, I'm interested to learn more - because I'm not currently aware of anything like that. I can get that from multiple platforms on AP *today*.
A cool project you may like is appviewlite: https://github.com/alnkesq/AppViewLite
You can run an appview entirely locally--i was even able to run this on my phone.
Its possible to directly crawl PDSes, meaning there's no reliance on a relay.
There's also https://reddwarf.app, which runs entirely in your browser, without an appview or relay.
And there's wafrn (which I'm using right now), which natively supports atproto and activitypub. It has its own appview, but it currently uses an external appview for notifications and fetching possible missing posts iirc.
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@thisismissem @mastodonmigration @baralheia I also think that the ATmosphere and the fediverse could both learn a lot from each other. ATproto could adopt directed messaging, and the fediverse could adopt content addressing and portable identity, both of which I believe are important. This isn't a pivot, I have been saying these things *since 2017*, before ActivityPub became a recommendation, and before ATproto even came on the scene, including even in my co-proposal with Jay Graeber about what Bluesky could be, and including in the articles referenced previously.
Unfortunately, I think there is a real risk that the fediverse is going to learn the *wrong* lessons from the ATmosphere, and adopt some of its "shared centralization" components, rather than the decentralization components that ATproto has that the fediverse doesn't yet. :\
Goodness, yes - it puzzles me greatly that portable identity isn't a part of the ActivityPub standard. It's an obvious gap, in hindsight.
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@quillmatiq @dansup I do know how toxic the response was to Bridgy Fed when Ryan first announced the Bluesky bridge, and I think his ability to weather that storm will go down as one of the most heroic efforts in the history of the social web.
To be fair, most of what I saw against Bridgy Fed wasn't against _bridging_. It was against (a) the initial decision to make it opt-out, (b) the justification "if we make it opt-in, people might not opt in, so making it opt-out will make it more useful". After Ryan listened to people explaining what's wrong with that, and switched to opt-in (respect to him for listening), I don't remember seeing further opposition, though of course there could've been some I didn't see.
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@thisismissem @stefan the reason for doing this multiplier is not so much for getting MAU right in absolute terms, but because mastodon/fedi MAU data also includes lurkers in their data. So you need it to get a fair comparison between fedi and the atmosphere
@laurenshof So your estimate is based on one "skeet" from a CTO of a company with a multi-million dollar VC "loan" that *needs* their numbers to look good?
Fair enough!
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To be fair, most of what I saw against Bridgy Fed wasn't against _bridging_. It was against (a) the initial decision to make it opt-out, (b) the justification "if we make it opt-in, people might not opt in, so making it opt-out will make it more useful". After Ryan listened to people explaining what's wrong with that, and switched to opt-in (respect to him for listening), I don't remember seeing further opposition, though of course there could've been some I didn't see.
@unchartedworlds@scicomm.xyz I don't see it either, but I can certainly believe that @quillmatiq@mastodon.social gets a ton of hate simply for being associated with BridgyFed, which is BlueSky adjacent, which is honestly enough for some people to instantly judge you as a bad person.
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To be fair, most of what I saw against Bridgy Fed wasn't against _bridging_. It was against (a) the initial decision to make it opt-out, (b) the justification "if we make it opt-in, people might not opt in, so making it opt-out will make it more useful". After Ryan listened to people explaining what's wrong with that, and switched to opt-in (respect to him for listening), I don't remember seeing further opposition, though of course there could've been some I didn't see.
@unchartedworlds @quillmatiq @dansup he got brigaded here and on GitHub. It was toxic.
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@mastodonmigration @baralheia decentralized *where* and *how*
Is ActivityPub really decentralized when everyone builds for compatibility with Mastodon (apart from Lemmy) or is it only decentralized in operations? Where mastodon.social accounts for a significant portion of the network? What about Pixelfed? How much decentralization there? Loops? I think there's only really one maybe two loops servers of any size?
Decentralization doesn't mean "run absolutely everything myself", I mean, sure, you *could* but that's expensive, complicated, and time consuming. Moderation? Most servers just import some blocklist snapshot at a given point in time.
Thing is, decentralization isn't the goal, the goal is better social apps.
Decentralization focuses on technology, not people. It's the "how" not the "why" and "for who"
"Thing is, decentralization isn't the goal, the goal is better social apps." And that's where I have to disagree. Decentralisation is the goal of the Fediverse and ActivityPub. It isn't for ATProto.
ATProto is designed to replicate a sort of "digital town square" where people meet and talk. ActivityPub in it's design is in a sort like the postal service where a instance can be a city, a neighbourhood or a single street/house.
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@laurenshof So your estimate is based on one "skeet" from a CTO of a company with a multi-million dollar VC "loan" that *needs* their numbers to look good?
Fair enough!
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@laurenshof Right. From the same person.
Well, again, fair enough, this all answers my question.
Appreciate it, both of you!
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@dansup@mastodon.social there are walls.. perhaps you don't see them because Pixelfed is large enough that it gets benefit of the doubt.
I got called a VC funded tech bro once, simply because that person found their public posts and profile on NodeBB (because, you know, federation), and absolutely did not back down until their instance's mod told them to quit it.
The smaller devs doing interesting things with fedi get absolutely fucked over for simply exposing the fact that... public stuff is public. ๐คฏ
That's not even getting into any of the tech arguments that make AP federation harder than it should be.
@thisismissem@hachyderm.io @evan@cosocial.ca @quillmatiq@mastodon.social
@julian @dansup @thisismissem @evan @quillmatiq
I need to call this one out, sorry.
"The smaller devs doing interesting things with fedi get absolutely fucked over for simply exposing the fact that... public stuff is public"
More and more, people joining this space are entirely unaware that this is a technical foundation of the space, and more and more people come to me as a service provider asking me why their content is on Web sites they did not sign up for.
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@julian @dansup @thisismissem @evan @quillmatiq
I need to call this one out, sorry.
"The smaller devs doing interesting things with fedi get absolutely fucked over for simply exposing the fact that... public stuff is public"
More and more, people joining this space are entirely unaware that this is a technical foundation of the space, and more and more people come to me as a service provider asking me why their content is on Web sites they did not sign up for.
@julian @dansup @thisismissem @evan @quillmatiq
I understand why.
You understand why.
Thousands of people do not, and tens and hundreds of thousands being invited in will also not understand this.
We need to do better than "public is public".
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@julian @dansup @thisismissem @evan @quillmatiq
I understand why.
You understand why.
Thousands of people do not, and tens and hundreds of thousands being invited in will also not understand this.
We need to do better than "public is public".
@jaz@toot.wales fair, and I'm certainly open to user education, but I refuse to engage with individuals who have demonized me from step 1.
I'm not planning to put in the effort to try to win back the trust of someone when I didn't do a damn thing to lose it.
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@mastodonmigration @baralheia @cwebber on activitypub, if I have 30,000 followers (1 follower per server), and I want to post a message, my server has to send out 30,000 messages.
In AT Protocol, if I want to do the same write operation, I send one http request to my PDS, the PDS then publishes that message to N connected relays (where N =< 12)
@thisismissem @mastodonmigration @baralheia @cwebber
I would argue that neither the AP nor activitypub are built directly for patterns of human communication that exist in the real world.
The "everyone messages everyone else and must have access to any message from anyone at any time" pattern embodied by the present Bluesky is not a real human way of communicating and forming communities, it is a figment of tech companies' imaginations and represents a massive amount of over-indexing that relies on, and therefore tends towards, centralized platforms.
The "everyone preferentially messages people in their nearby vicinity but sometimes people further away" view embodied by most present Fediverse software assumes a flat social network in which "non-local" is functionally the same in all cases and does not model human social networks very well.
AP assumes you are building bunch of villages with a flat road network between them. atproto assumes you are building Saudi Arabia's The Line.