this post was submitted on 20 Jun 2023
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No Stupid Questions

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Since news leaked out 2 days ago that Facebook has approached Mastodon developers and admins - requiring non-disclosure agreements first - the whole microverse (i.e. mastodon / pleroma etc, the micro-blogging part of fedi) has been talking about nothing but that and Facebook's imminent entry into the fediverse with an as yet not clearly defined entity called Barcelona or p92. This woud be very roughly comparable to Reddit saying they are going to federate with lemmy.

Yet here on lemmy I could only find a relatively small discussion.

https://kbin.social/m/fediverse/t/62958

Did the lemmyverse not know or just not care that much?

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[–] [email protected] 46 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Upvoted for mentioning EEE. Meta has been really active in facilitating progress in the opensource community lately with their work on LLAMA, so I'm not surprised to hear they are involved elsewhere.

[–] [email protected] 13 points 2 years ago (5 children)

Like much of big tech, they've been open sourcing software for years and EEE is a Microsoft playbook that was mainly used to target competitors, not open source software, from before Facebook even existed. People are parroting it because it's a nice sounding alliteration, but it's a false equivalence that does not apply because we can fork lemmy at any time.

[–] dustyData 14 points 2 years ago (2 children)

Google successfully EEE the internet. They embraced chromium, extended such that they were the main (only) force that determines internet standads, now they extinguish all competition or obstacles in the ad space by setting the rules. This was done through free open source software.

[–] Cannacheques 3 points 2 years ago

Would love to see Mozilla come up with a few new standards

[–] Melon 0 points 2 years ago (1 children)

They created Chromium, which means it isn't EEE - it just means they created a successful product.

[–] dustyData 6 points 2 years ago

Your three statements are not related logically. They creating Chromium as open software doesn't precludes an EEE strategy. A successful product says nothing about whether that product was part of an EEE strategy. MSN Messenger was a successful product. Both by being universally adopted on the internet and fulfilling its meta purpose. It was intentionally created for (and features were chosen and developed) to displace and kill AOL's IM. And it was later revealed to be 100% part of an EEE ploy. Just to bring the point home, Chromium is intentionally kneecapped and devs fight all the time about feature development because Google keeps it below-parity with Chrome, because Chrome's purpose is to create a de-facto control over browsers, Chromium's purpose is to wash Chrome's face. It already succeeded partially by displacing the competence. Now Google's implement features on Chrome first, even if those features were innovated or implemented before by other browsers, then makes the W3C board change the standards to create the illusion that Chromes was first and manufacturing the facade that it's the best browser. Thus ensuring their domination of the space. It's just basic corporate manipulation.

[–] grue 14 points 2 years ago (1 children)

"Embrace, Extend, Extinguish" might be difficult to make work with Free Software because it can be forked, but that doesn't categorically exclude it from being a strategy companies can try. It's still relevant to warn the community about.

[–] jorpylaforge 13 points 2 years ago (1 children)

sorry to be so direct, but if anyone is parroting anything, it's you with the "they would never do that thing they always do, i'm super reasonable" position. EEE is literally covered in the first leaked Halloween document as a strategy to displace open standards.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halloween_documents#Documents_I_and_II

this is a strategy microsoft has consistently used for years and continues to use to this day. hell, they are embracing and extending javascript right now with typescript.

[–] InternetCitizen2 4 points 2 years ago (1 children)

undefined> does not apply because we can fork lemmy at any time.

Not to be a contrarian, but I feel this is a false claim here. After some time we will lose the mind share that gets people to switch over. People won't switch from Messenger and WhatsApp to Telegram or Signal. At one point people are just too situated.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 years ago

I think it's different with those services, as they weren't slowly built on top of eachother and as messaging apps they require your personal friends and family to also migrate to fully utilize. I didn't know anyone personally on Reddit, so the switch to Lemmy was easy as soon as users started moving here overall. Also the build style of a single piece of software makes it easy to fork out when needed rather than having to fully migrate, and since it's all built on ActivityPub theoretically you could still interact with those instances.