Why YSK: If we want to keep the Fediverse in the hands of its users and prevent “enshittification” (search it), it’s good to know how corporations kill grassroots projects like this.

I saw this in another thread on /c/Showerthoughts. I think it’s important for this to be circulated widely so that the broader Fediverse community is aligned. We don’t want admins second-guessing their decisions when users start infighting. We should be united in our thinking and ready to protect our platform.

  • Noedel@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Great read!

    I remember me using software called trillian that supported logins to all chat networks, so I could use ICQ, Google, MSN and AOL all at the same time

    • TheBeege@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Oh man, I remember Trillian, too. That was great. Must have been a nightmare to build, though

      • exscape@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        It was “just” a bunch of clients in one though, AFAIK it couldn’t connect people from different protocols.
        Pidgin still exists; I used it probably 20 years back on Linux.

        • TheBeege@lemmy.worldOP
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          1 year ago

          Ahh, I recall using Pidgin, too. I think i ended up favoring it over Trillian. I already had accounts on all the services, so it worked out. I guess thinking about it, if only basic chat was supported, it may not have been terrible supporting everything

    • thorhs@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I also remember when XMPP wa still the cool kid on the block. Gtalk and other chat networks supported it and allowed federation. I tan my own XMPP server and could talk to users on other servers and even networks. But then Google cut the federation and eventually all external access.

      It could have been the next email, but big corporations were already in the chat space and they all walked in their user base.

      I’m fairly certain that if email (SMTP) hadn’t been the dominant protocol, we would have walled gardens there as well.

      • soweli-mute@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        the internet without the existance of email as a de-facto proof of identity and account recovery protocol would certainly be interesting.

        almost every single site these days requires you to have an email to sign up. it would be interesting to know what system we would have used instead if email wasn’t an option.