This is a bit political but i feel this should be looked at. Whatever it’s on on the Lemmy instance or the Mastodon instances.
My main concern is about the concept of Embrase Extend Extinguish
they could use.
This is a bit political but i feel this should be looked at. Whatever it’s on on the Lemmy instance or the Mastodon instances.
My main concern is about the concept of Embrase Extend Extinguish
they could use.
@crashdoom @brodokk
I very much agree with the wording on the pact’s page: I believe that a Facebook fedi project, and for that matter corporate influence in general, is a real and serious threat to the health and longevity of fedi and must be fought back against at every possible opportunity.
Fedi has been my escape from corporate machinations, and I don’t want to see that erode over time. A corporate fedi project will draw a large userbase to itself, and that will make it very difficult for instances to maintain independence without cutting theirselves off from large sections of the fedi community. Corporations will try to shape fedi to fit their bottom line, and that will not be in the best interest of community members. I very much expect corporate footholds to be the start of embrace, extend, extinguish campaigns.
So I say make it as hard as possible for them to even try – and send a unified message that there are no profits to be found here.
Honestly, while I wholeheartedly support blocking Meta, I’m not in principle opposed to corporations trying to get involved in fedi. I think it’s kinda the nature of it that it’s not going to be overly corporate-friendly anyways.
It’s just that Meta have so thoroughly shown themselves to be bad actors, there’s zero reason to give them another chance. It doesn’t have to be (IMHO) all-or-nothing. We can be broadly open to companies dipping their toes in the water, while still saying “fuck facebook”.