this post was submitted on 21 Apr 2024
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[โ€“] daltotron@lemmy.world 2 points 6 months ago (1 children)

I mean I dunno, in some ways I think the fediverse might be worse, right? If I'm on reddit, then I have to intentionally go to r/the Donald or whatever, and manually block the shit from appearing on my page, if that were to happen (it probably won't unless I seek it out, but yeah). With the drivers, after choosing your instance, you just don't see, say, posts from hexbear or whatever. NSFW posts, whatever, whatever they decided to defederate with. So it kinda just seems like a continuation of the atomization, a continuation of the fracturing of the information landscape, the continuation of the death of the monoculture.

At the same time, Reddit also sucks. You really don't need a complicated system to create these perverse incentive structures, anyone who's used reddit could probably already tell you the relatively obvious set of disadvantages that are incurred by the platform, that lend themselves towards echo chambers. Downvoted posts don't float to the top, which means they aren't seen, certain users are given priority based on the historical consistency of their ability to get upvotes, and overall the platform is going to consistently cater towards the lowest combo dominator. Lemmy hasn't really solved any of those problems with the inherent structure, there, of like a "pure" democratic system online. It's only really solved, like, selecting for only privacy councious Linux tech bro libs on this instance, and then selecting for revolutionary cosplay commies on the other couple. And then Germans, also, somehow.

Even with that simple of a structure, it doesn't work. I could spell out similar problems with the way 4chan is structured, and that site is basically just like, first come first serve, as simple as it gets. To solve these problems, you have to introduce more complicated mechanisms, but to introduce more complicated regulatory mechanisms, you introduce probably more obfuscation and probably more centralization of power.

As far as I can tell, without majorly changing the economic structure of our society, and the set of behaviors and incentives that are created as a result of that structure, nothing on the Internet is really going to change. The user behavior is shaped by the environment, usually not the other way around, so much. I dunno, I'm kind of a boomer when it comes to this stuff specifically. It's nice to be able to not pay 50 bucks to get a manual for my car, though, so that's not nothing.

[โ€“] rufus@discuss.tchncs.de 1 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago)

Hehe. You're right. Lemmy certainly isn't the pinnacle of communication platforms. I kind of have my hopes up for a worthy successor... The Piefed people seem to have some good ideas.

Ultimately there isn't a technical solution to everything. Could be very well the case that platforms, individual behaviour and society needs to change. In order to achieve change.

I like this threaded structure of conversation. And Lemmy is okay. It's not perfect but I occasionally enjoy spending some of my time here. I hope it's going to improve and the community might do, too. I'm not aware of any better alternative.

I don't think the Fediverse is "worse" than something else... It's a good idea and approach. But it's more complicated than just that.

And I'd also like more democracy on the internet. And the place being built for the people, not any advertisers or other stakeholders... Technically that should be possible. The Fediverse isn't there (yet) but I think it has some potential to go that direction. At least technologically.