it's area.
The number of workers who say they are stretched thin has remained stubbornly high as inflation weighs on American households.
Breaking news: in one of the most productive countries / economies in the entire history of humanity, the majority of people creating that productivity do not get to enjoy the rewards of that productivity.
same as it ever was.
great comment!
i tend to agree. i think the fediverse is probably the best model moving forward. it is a challenging problem!
me too! 💜
For sure.
with respect to bots, as of this time I don't think it's a problem that can be fully solved, although I do think over a long enough timeline the fediverse is probably the best suited to handle that problem.
I wanted to see a visualization of the relative size comparison, so I used the data that was available on Wikipedia, but this data is approximate at best.
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.whynotdrs.org/post/494473
> Compared against the predominant incumbent social media platforms, the fediverse is very small. > > information sources: > - List of social platforms with at least 100 million active users - Wikipedia > - Fediverse Observer >
TLDR at the bottom
Hello everyone,
i'd like to discuss something that was brought up last night on the pp show.
"I do have a small little announcement here. The pp show as many know the subreddit was nuked. off reddit, which was very sad. you know, we don't have really, i know X is a good replacement in the meantime, so, but we need a forum, right fellas? so, one of the pps out there actually reached out to me, and i actually did a video conference with them, he's a super nice guy, and it turns out he's gonna be building a PP show mobile app man! so right on! so pretty soon we're gonna have our own platform, not X, not Reddit, it's going to be a PP god damn platform, fellas. Full app and everything, so soon enough, we'll be able to move our DD there when things explode man there's always gonna be more stocks to talk about, so things will never get nuked again. It's not even Lemmy man, it's gonna be an app! so a full on PP app, fellas. right on, I'm super excited, and yea i'll be paying to host it for everybody and all that, so right the fuck on fellas"
Obviously, pp can do whatever he wants for his show. If pp wants to have a mobile app, that is terrific. I will be cheering on the development of the app and I hope it succeeds and helps the show and helps the community.
However, if the objective of creating the mobile app is to have a "forum", allow me to use this Lemmy post in this existing Lemmy forum community, to explain why it will be challenging to have "a mobile app" as a forum.
1. A mobile app will exclude non-mobile access.
So one person is going to develop a mobile app? So it will only be usable on mobile devices, not laptops or desktop computers.
2. It must either be 2 apps (1 for Android and 1 for iOS), or half of all mobile users will be excluded
Which mobile os, Android or iOS? So one developer is going to either create and then maintain 2 full distinct apps, one for Android, one for iOS, or, this developer will create just 1 app for one of these operating systems, and the other half of all mobile users will be excluded along with PC and laptop users.
3. Because of the network effect, getting users to join a new competing social networking app is hard.
Putting the other stuff aside, let's assume that it is somehow an app that is usable by Android users, iOS users, as well as PC users, no problem. Like the way that a web-based app like Lemmy works.
Because of the network effect, it will be a struggle to onboard many users. It's largely for this reason why there are currently not so many users here on Lemmy. It's sort of a chicken and egg problem.
Think of that scene in The Office, S3E2: The Convention, where Michael is trying to get a party started in the hotel in Room 308, Party Central. Michael tries to recruit people to join his party. A few individuals go to Room 308 only to find that it's just Michael there alone and a bunch of bottles of liquor, and so they don't stick around because there's no actual party. There's no party because there are no people, and there are no people because there is no party.
Social media is kind of like this. People tend to want to be where the action is, and up to this point that has historically meant places like Reddit and X / Twitter.
Twitter and Reddit and YouTube are enormous centralized networks. E.g. Reddit and Twitter both have around 500 million monthly active users.
The fediverse, in comparison, has roughly a mere 2 million monthly active users.
Because of sheer size of reddit's network, it made it relatively easy for ~ 20,000 users to gather in the same subcommunity.
But, oh no, Reddit is a centralized platform that reserves the power to get rid of anyone they don't like from their platform that belongs to them, and they got rid of that subreddit that we all used to enjoy. that location for ~ 20 thousand users no longer exists, and we now find ourselves in the situation we're in.
So some people went to X. how many people joined the pp show community on X? around 5 thousand, not close to the nearly 20 thousand of the subreddit, and that's with many users already on X. To get to 20k will take time and effort. Also, as pp mentioned, in the long run X isn't really a proper forum is it?
Some people went to Lemmy. how many? a few hundred.
say in a few months, PP releases a premium mobile app. how many people will join? how much of a community will exist there? How long would it take to get to 20,000 subscribers?
It won't be easy to get a fresh party started on a new app.
4. The federated model is superior to a standalone model
It seems implied that this app that will be developed will be its own standalone social network app of some kind, and not federated or otherwise connected to any existing network.
the folks behind the website DRSGME.org went through a similar ordeal as the pp show community is currently going through, when reddit banned r/DRSyourGME.
That group ultimately decided to start their own Lemmy instance and I've been using it ever since. I wrote a post just yesterday on why, in my opinion, Lemmy and the fediverse is cool.
TLDR of that post: The federated model connects you to a larger network while still giving you full authority over your own instance, should you choose to run one.
If you have a standalone app / social network, you will be in a much smaller bubble, not connected to any larger network at all, which will make it that much more challenging to grow the community.
So, what are the options going forward?
- use existing centralized social media platforms, like Reddit, X, and YouTube.
- Pros: largest networks, largest benefit from the network effect, therefore largest reach. apps are very functional and polished, high production value.
- Cons: Centralized authorities reserve the ability to deplatform you at any moment. There is no reason to assume that YouTube is perpetually safe. Our opponents who aimed at getting the subreddit shut down are also aiming to get the YouTube channel shut down. Don't say it can't happen.
- Use a new bespoke app, developed specifically for the purposes of this community.
- Pros: pp retains full control over the app, the app can be designed or customized in any particular way to suit the requirements. Can have a theme of dildo upvotes / downvotes and whatever else you want.
- Cons: among what is discussed throughout this post, it will take time to develop an app, and it will take ongoing effort to maintain it. If it's 2 apps, 1 for both Android and iOS, then there are 2 codebases and the work is doubled. It's a lot of responsibility and expectations for 1 single developer. Deplatforming can still happen because Google and Apple retain the ability to get rid of any apps that they don't want in their app stores. Using 1 centralized bespoke app also necessarily implies 1 single point of failure.
- Use the fediverse and federated apps
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Pros: the fediverse is an existing social network of about 2 million monthly active users that anyone can plug in to. It currently exists and is ready to be used. Right here, right now. Anyone using any fediverse app is technically able to connect and interact with anyone in just about any other fediverse app. Lemmy can be accessed from a web browser on any device: PC, Android, iOS. There are also third party apps specifically for Android and iOS that can be used. The fediverse enables you to connect to an already existing social network while allowing you to retain full administrative authority over your instance and community. Effectively, you cannot be deplatformed, if you are your own platform host. (btw a federated YouTube alternative exists called PeerTube)
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Cons: Lemmy or other fediverse apps may not be perceived as being as "cool" as other options. It does require some amount of time and effort to host your own Lemmy or other fediverse instance. You can choose to not host your own instance, such as this community here we are currently in, but then you are at the mercy of the admins of whatever instance you are in. If those admins happen to decide one day that they don't like you, they could remove you from their instance. Although these apps are open source, they currently don't necessarily allow for the level of customization that might be desired. as of now, I don't think it is possible to implement dildo upvotes and downvotes. But, over time such ability could be integrated into the open source software.
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@Ppseeds, I hope you read this post and consider what I have written here with an open mind.
The purpose of this post is not to try and discourage the idea of having a bespoke app created for this community. In stead I simply want to address the reality of what options exist, and why some options might be preferable over others. I am obviously biased and believe that the fediverse is the best long term option, but maybe it turns out that I've got it all wrong.
I personally will continue to use Reddit, and X, and YouTube, and various Discord channels, and Lemmy.
TLDR: Of the available options, the fediverse (e.g. Lemmy) is the only option that gives you the power to connect to an existing social network while retaining full administrative authority of your community, and the only option that gives you the tools to ensure you cannot be deplatformed.
cult member checking in.
These are some great questions that I don't necessarily know the answer to.
I imagine a discussion platform kind of like Reddit / Lemmy, but where moderators are all democratically elected. This would ensure that the community always has the power to remove moderators that aren't serving the interests of the community. In terms of how changes are made, I imagine an environment that combines the best features of Github and Wikipedia, in terms of how changes are made and decided upon and applied for everyone. That there would be standard processes in place for making suggestions and changes, but that the ultimate power rests in the hands of the community participants.
You aren't wrong, trust is obviously very important.
What I am trying to describe is the emergence of an alternative system that people could choose to use based on its own merit, similar to how bitcoin has emerged. While many people still don't trust an idea like bitcoin, already many millions of people do trust it, and the aggregate value of all bitcoin is currently something like half a trillion USD because of this, because of the network effect, because many people do give value to it. As the years go on, as bitcoin continues to fulfill its basic promise of being trustworthy, of functioning as intended, more people will continue to trust it and use it because, while flawed, it promises a degree of inherent trust and functionality that is superior to the incumbent alternative fiat currencies that continue to lose more and more relative value every year due to irresponsibility and corruption of the central banks.
In this sense, a decentralized digital identity network would simply be a more functionally decentralized social network. The topic here is trust, and here we are in the fediverse because centralized for-profit social media companies are not preferred by people here, because of trust and other reasons. As the years go on, the experience of for-profit social media companies will have to compete with the experience of fediverse social media, and if fediverse social media is better, it will eventually emerge as a preferred viable alternative, and maybe even the predominant form of social media. People can choose to use it or not, but because of the network effect, as more people do use it, it increases its inherent value, which causes more people to trust it and use it, which continues to increase the inherent value, etc., until some thresholds are reached.
This would be true also of a hypothetical decentralized identity network. People could choose to use it or not, based on its merits. Many people would choose not to use it because they don't trust it. But, as it would continue to grow and evolve and improve, like bitcoin, or like the fediverse, a larger number of people would use it and trust it despite it being relatively niche, it would continue to demonstrate itself as a viable alternative. In such a scenario of emerging naturally by competing with the incumbent systems, it is not inconceivable that such a system could eventually surpass a threshold and become the predominant social network and identity system in the world, that also provides effective functionality of things like voting on issues.
The way I see it, people are able to be influenced, particularly by the power of such forces as group-think and tribalism. For example, consider the Asch conformity experiments. For the majority of people, when they see what "the group" thinks, this has an outstanding impact on their own opinion. This is how the ultra wealthy use culture wars to divide and distract the electorate, by fabricating and propagating narratives in mainstream media and on social media that confirms the political and tribalistic biases that we have that tells us we are right and our political opponents are wrong. They have us fighting culture wars so that we don't unite and engage them in the class war.
Propaganda exists because it is an effective way of exerting mind control over millions of people. Current forms of for-profit social media are incentivized to have a platform that is maximally engaging, (addicting), because the more time that people spend on the platforms means more exposure to advertisements means more revenue for the for-profit company. Adding to this, rage and anger and hatred are emotions that gets the adrenaline flowing, and this is an addictive loop that Fox news figured out many years ago. Before social media, day after day, night after night you tell your audience that they should be angry and afraid. That insert minority group or political faction is the cause of all of your problems in life. Later, Facebook took the same idea and baked it into the largest social media network in the world. Facebook, Instagram, Tik Tok, YouTube, Reddit, Twitter/X, etc., each of these social networks are specifically designed to be as addictive as possible and one of the methods of creating addiction is by providing the users with all of the rage-fuel they could ever consume.
Part of this is you've got troll farms out there running many millions of false identities, simulating sentiment. E.g. from the movie Borat 2 : https://imgur.com/gallery/SFVNwWh. Troll farms are a type of propaganda, and they exist because they work. They are on the social media platforms all day every day for the benefit of whoever is funding them, to promote certain narratives in order to divide and distract us away from other real issues.
But, in my perfect world, you would have the technological infrastructure in place that is not dependent on for-profit social media companies, that gives every person a unique verified identity that belongs to them and only them, and that by design such a network would prevent fraudulent identities from existing. Troll farms wouldn't be able to use endless numbers of false identities to simulate a sentiment and influence the minds of millions of people.
If such a network were to exist, it would give the people of the world the ability to actually express themselves, without having to compete with fabricated propaganda narratives.
Consider for example a twitter/X poll. Nobody trusts a poll on Twitter/X because everyone knows that Twitter is infested with bots and that you don't have anything that remotely resembles a true democracy there. There is simply so much room for manipulation and no reason to trust it. But, consider a similar kind of poll but one that would exist on top of the hypothetical decentralized identity network. Suddenly you would have a tool in place that could actually truly assess the sentiment of the people, to get a consensus of what the people think of a particular subject, and you could actually trust those results.
And this brings us back to my original point here: People are able to be influenced, people have a tendency to conform, and if you had a global social media network that could effectively get the consensus of people in a way that everyone would trust, you would probably have an environment where things that are true and maximally fair naturally rise to the top, and that issues that benefit one particular political party or ideology to their benefit over the opposing political party or ideology, suddenly wouldn't be as important and wouldn't have so much attention given to them. You would be able to have an environment that destroys our filter bubbles, filter bubbles that exist because for-profit social media companies make lots of money by keeping us all addicted to their platforms.
Oops I made a mistake there, I've corrected it now. from "some kind of decentralized software network any kinds of centralized authority" to "some kind of decentralized software network **without ** any kinds of centralized authority".
You raise valid points.
Regarding the issue of trust: the same argument you raise is one that people use against bitcoin, and for that matter what people used to say about debit cards and then online banking. That they would never trust a computer or a machine to securely store or transact their money. But debit cards, online banking, and even bitcoin are all implementations of technology, flawed as they may be, that achieve a degree of trust by fulfilling their promise.
Whether or not an individual person trusts bitcoin, for example, it doesn't matter how that person feels, the bitcoin network continues to fulfill it's basic promise of being a decentralized cryptocurrency where you can't fraudulently double-spend the currency and you can't fraudulently mint any currency, it is all maintained by unbreakable mathematics and vetted thousands of times over on many independent nodes. Bitcoin is not a perfect system but what it is is a network that has demonstrated that you can transact valuable digital information without needing a central authority of any kind, without needing to trust anyone at all, the trust is in the mathematics and the combined computing power of the network.
As for the issue of privacy: this is certainly an issue that would need to be solved but I don't believe it is unsolvable. As an example, Monero is a cryptocurrency that is similar to bitcoin but is privacy focused. Again it is not perfect but it does demonstrate that you can create a cryptographic design that can facilitate transactions privately while protecting the identity of the accounts.
The problem that this ideal, hypothetical network would solve, would be to not require the rigmarole of elections via paper ballot as all. Even if you had a perfectly accurate paper ballot election, part of the issue with that method is the sheer amount of time and resources involved in accurately tabulating and verifying hundreds of millions of votes. The amount of resources is so great that it makes it such that you only have an election or referendum every 2 years or every 4 years or some cadence like that, which is much slower than what a hypothetical decentralized computer network could achieve. Why wait 2 years if you could hypothetically generate a consensus within a few days or even hours in some cases.
This is a really great question OP.
Personally, I do not have a great deal of faith in the democratic political systems as they currently exist. Political parties are motivated by self-interest and not necessarily the interest of the people.
As someone wisely said, politics is the gentle art of getting votes from the poor and campaign funds from the rich, by promising to protect each from the other.
I believe that our current systems, for example first past the post, and the electoral college, are vestiges of systems that were created hundreds of years ago, and don't work effectively enough to keep up with our rapidly evolving global technological society.
There once was a time before democracies, of monarchies, etc., but from various societal changes and historic events, democracy eventually emerged. But today, what we call democracy is a situation where the ultra rich and the for-profit businesses have gamed the system to their advantage, despite whatever democratic systems are in place. Wealth inequality is ever-increasing, one of the fundamental problems that is the cause of so many other problems. Rising economic inequality is one of the conditions that preceded the French Revolution.
It is my belief that salvation lies in the power of decentralized technology. Politics and nationalism are increasingly causing problems that are not for the benefit of the people of the world, but for the benefit of those entities. Those entities will always be self-interested, and they will continue to play the games of politics and geopolitics in the pursuit of their own interests. But most people in the world don't want to have war with each other.
What if there was a system that specifically represented everyone as maximally fairly as possible, in the most democratic way that you can imagine?
To me the answer to that question would be a system of some type where every person in the world gets the exact same voting power as every other person, 1 person gets 1 vote. Seems pretty basic and also fundamental to maximizing fairness. You would need some ability to somehow accurately account for everyone's vote, ensuring transparency and prevent any kinds of tampering or fraud in any kinds of voting records or elections. This could only be achieved using modern technology including the internet, and some kind of decentralized software network without any kinds of centralized authority, with hundreds, thousands of nodes ensuring consensus on what is "true".
Bitcoin is a great example of a decentralized software network that has a design like this. A system where there is no single authority that can unilaterally rewrite the rules to it's own benefit. It is a decentralized network that can achieve consensus without relying on having to specifically trust any other participants in the network, because all nodes can all individually verify the consensus data.
But bitcoin is a cryptocurrency governed by a decentralized set of mathematical rules that all participants mutually agree on, and this decentralized-technological-democracy network would not be a cryptocurrency.
This network would ideally operate on many thousand nodes across the planet, more nodes creating more resiliency. The primary purpose of the nodes would be their record keeping of the cryptographic identities of every person in the world, ensuring ability to verify uniqueness, kind of like a dencetralized digital directory. A digital identity in this context would basically be ownership of a set of digital keys that provide access to a digital public account that you would own and only you could possibly ever own it, not so different from how a digital wallet works for bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies.
This would be ensured by having processes in place that make every person verify every other person that they know. For example in real life you know people by their faces, their voices, their mannerisms, etc., these features immediately identify the unique person that no other person is. You would have for example an address book of people you know, and you would perform a type of mutual digital key signing with each person in that list, you both verify to one another what your public cryptographic identity is that you and only you could possess. Everyone verifies everyone else that they know, and all of these cryptographic verifications would be stored on the nodes, and it would be an unbreakable database of public digital identities, serving as the foundation of a digital world where there is a common network that contains everyone's unfraudable identity, regardless of their location or nationality or political affiliation. There would of course need to be processes in place to recover any lost keys, but this is a minor point in the big picture.
A false identity could not be created because it would not be possible to verify the existence of somebody that does not exist. You could try and fabricate a false identity and maybe even collude with other people to create false verifications of somebody that doesn't exist, but over time it would be impossible to maintain such a fraud. If for example there was an organized effort of many people to collude and create numerous false identities, the way that troll farms do it today, it would become apparent to the network that this large number of false identities seem to only have identity verifications with each other, effectively demonstating that it is practically a separate group from the rest of the entirety of the network. There would not be very much decentralized trust in those particular identities.
Once you have this decentralized identity network where every person is in possession of exactly one unique public identity associated with themselves, and importantly that there aren't any additional false identities in the network, you would now have the foundation in place where you could create a new technological democratic system where every person on the planet is an equal participant. You have software that can take polls or votes or elections, and every individual person with their unique identity gets exactly 1 vote per issue.
What does the consensus of the entire world really want?
"Hello world, do you like access to things like clean water and electricity? Should we prioritize things like this and get to work ensuring that everyone in the world has equal access to clean water?" "No", vote the self-interested ultra wealthy, who don't want to have to share their hoarded wealth to fund such initiatives. "Yes" vote the billions of people who all rationally agree that it would be a good thing to prioritize things like clean water and that we should be taking whatever appropriate actions that fairly provide everyone in the world access to clean water. A clear consensus emerges: everyone in the world likes access to clean water and also electricity, and in the interest of maximal fairness, this creates the "political" will if you can call it that, to get it done. No longer would power of the government and the political system be beholden to the small number of ultra wealthy individuals that don't care about the rest of the world.
Lemmy is a breath of fresh air.
To me, going from Reddit to Lemmy feels similar to way back when, going from Digg to Reddit.
back then, there was a sense of superiority among Digg users, and when people suggested "maybe try Reddit", it was quite often met with criticism and scorn, "Reddit sucks, the UI is ugly, only nerds use it", and similar types of of criticism.
and yet, Digg continued to falter from its shortcomings, and Reddit continued to exist as a viable alternative. Initially it wasn't appealing to everyone, but a large enough number of people gave it a try that it continued to grow, and as it grew it became more attractive to a larger number of people, and then became an equal competitor Digg, and Digg continued to falter, and eventually Reddit emerged as the superior alternative.
the transition from Reddit to Lemmy has many similarities to that story. Reddit is faltering from its shortcomings, a common sentiment encountered on Reddit when mentioning Lemmy or the fediverse is met with a similar arrogant sense of superiority, and yet Lemmy continues to grow and attract new users.
as the days go on, Lemmy will continue to appear as the more attractive alternative against the backdrop of Reddit's shortcomings to a larger number of people. to me it seems that we've already crossed some critical thresholds and it's only a matter of time before the fediverse becomes mainstream.
glad to be here with you all
a proponent of DRS, a proponent of GME, a proponent of the fediverse and freedom of communication.