this post was submitted on 18 Dec 2023
31 points (91.9% liked)
Lemmy
2172 readers
95 users here now
Everything about Lemmy; bugs, gripes, praises, and advocacy.
For discussion about the lemmy.ml instance, go to [email protected].
founded 4 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
There isn't practically any way of blocking your content from being seen on another platform. It's an arms race and you'll always lose. Look at Reddit, they had a whole campaign to kill their API, and most of their quality content is reposted here through bots. If you post something on the internet, there it no way to ensure it doesn't appear on Threads, where you posted the content originally doesn't change that fact.
The reason for not directly federating content to Threads isn't so nobody there can ever see my amazing posts, it's so Meta can't easily profile me. Scraping public posts on a different platform would probably be illegal, at least in the EU, and reposts don't give them a lot of data about me. Federating content, however, would give them most of the same data that Mastodon has on me without even having to ask.
Meta can always profile you from the content you post to the fediverse, and they don't need Threads to do it. In the fediverse, every upvote, every down vote, every comment, every ban, and everything else is a matter of public record that can be easily queried by anyone without logging in to anything.
In the EU companies can't scrape personally identifiable information without consent, even if it's already publicly available. IANAL, and there's probably ways they can sneak around the GDPR, but at least it's not a free for all. It's unclear though how it works for federation. It's definitely not the same legally though.
Info that is publically broadcast, that technically must be publically broadcast, that isn't necessarily personally identifiable, and is only linked to a user-chosen pseudonym probably isn't going to be found to have much of a right to privacy.