slightly pessimistic
@eniko Honestly, every time I see people complaining about 'drama', it just feels confrontational in how much society seems to have lost its collective ability to understand and manage social spaces... even the understanding that conflict is a thing that happens in social interaction, seems just *gone*, and it makes me worry about how on earth we're all supposed to recover from this
People complain about inter-instance drama on the fediverse and, yeah I get it. It's super annoying when a bunch of people you don't know get into it for reasons you don't care about and it affects your social space. It does suck!
But the fediverse is a network of social spaces containing millions of people, owned and operated by a bunch of regular people, and people are messy so sometimes things will get messy on here. It sucks, but it's inevitable. Expected, even
To be honest given all that I'm kind of shocked how smoothly things seem to go for most of us on here most days
IND against humanity
IND Amsterdam, Tuesday, 27 February (16:00)
CW-boost: transphobia, wikipedia being shitty
@pieselpriemel Any network of federated communication servers that fits the 'open connectivity and ecosystem' ideals that you would find in ActivityPub, Matrix, etc. - with a special emphasis on AP.
Just being connected would not be enough to fit into my definition of 'fediverse'; it would need to subscribe to those ideals of openness and lack of central control, and at least nominally achieve them.
@virtulis Looks like B2C only did parcel aggregration so they're still not really delivering anything themselves, just passing it on to local last-mile transporters (and presumably providing centralized tracking and billing services)
@fogti@chaos.social The near-total incompatibility in practice combined with the lack of actual convincing benefits besides "looks shiny" and the widespread misinformation about what the benefits supposedly are.
It's created basically two split ecosystems that take hours upon hours to try and integrate back together for maintainers, and all tooling now needs *two* implementations forever
Quickly checking up on the state of public opinion about ESM in JS and it kind of feels like by this point pretty much everyone who has actually worked on JS tooling (which ESM was claimed to make easier) has come around to the view that ESM was a mistake and not worth the ecosystem misery it caused
Not remotely the first time I'm bringing this up, but: a lot of services don't actually need federation (with all the tradeoffs and caveats that come with that), they just need a mechanism for zero-effort account/profile creation and management that doesn't rely on a third-party service.
That's the sort of thing that could plausibly be solved with a browser extension or feature. It would be nice to see more interest of developers in doing so.
If you can eliminate the whole "pick username, enter personal details, generate password, keep track in password manager, confirm e-mail address in site-specific way, have to keep updating avatars/names across sites forever" dance, then "needing an account per site" suddenly isn't a problem at all anymore...
In the process of moving to @joepie91. This account will stay active for the foreseeable future! But please also follow the other one.
Technical debt collector and general hype-hater. Early 30s, non-binary, ND, poly, relationship anarchist, generally queer.
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Sometimes horny on main (behind CW), very much into kink (bondage, freeuse, CNC, and other stuff), and believe it or not, very much a submissive bottom :p
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Strong views about abolishing oppression, hierarchy, agency, and self-governance - but I also trust people by default and give them room to grow, unless they give me reason not to. That all also applies to technology and how it's built.