I just wanted to share my thoughts with you. I will appreciate hearing what you think.

I’ve been reading about P92 and fedipact. I have an observation which I think helps understand why our opinions on the matter are so different and hear out the other side. This article had the biggest impacts on these thoughts.

I think there are mainly two types of Fediverse users. To make writing about them easier, I’m gonna use made up terms: Intensivists and Extensivists.

Intensivists are people who came here because they grew tired with the mainstream corporate-controlled media. They embrace Fediverse for it’s freedom, openness and privacy. They will see the platform as successful if it stays decentralized.

Extensivists are people, who pay most attention to functionality. They want the platform to grow, spread and will consider it successful if it serves many people well.

These two groups aren’t opposite of each other. On the contrary, they mostly share values. I believe neither would stay here very long if the other’s expectations weren’t met at all. Moreover, I believe most users of both groups dislike Facebook and Meta. The difference between them is their priorities.

For intensivists driven by their strive for privacy, federating with Meta defeates their whole purpose for using Fediverse. For extensivists however it’s a more complex issue. They weight the upsides (new users, more content, interoperability) against the risks (privacy, bad moderation, EEE). Those people’s opinions will vary.

    • nanook@friendica.eskimo.com
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      1 year ago

      @AvengingFemme So so, it’s easier to find “relevant” responses with google, IF it’s not something politically charged that Google is intentionally suppressing, but if it is something Google doesn’t want you to see you’re likely to find it with yacy. The way yacy works, each node talks to all the others, so whatever your site has indexed, and you can direct what it indexes, those results are combined with all the other nodes when you do a search. But the downside is that it is resource intensive, particularly you need a lot of RAM, 96GB is marginal.