Comment by fsflover
4 years ago
> "Impossible to leave" is not a matter of closed or open, but it's a matter of social networks in general. You could make Facebook free software and its problems wouldn't disappear.
Not true. If you have interoperability between different networks, you can leave. This is how ActivityPub (e.g. Mastodon, PeerTube, PixelFed) works.
> Not to mention that, again, 99% of people will get vendor-locked because in the end nobody wants to run their own instance of a federated social network.
You just switch to any other instance, because Mastodon doesn't prevent you from doing that.
> The main problem with privacy and computer control is a collective one that must be solved through laws. Thinking that individual action and free software will solve it is completely utopic.
We need both. You cannot force Facebook to allow interoperability when there is no other social network.
> If you have interoperability between different networks, you can leave
If all your friends are in a Mastodon instance and you think that instance is scanning your messages, you'll find it hard to leave because leaving the instance for another that doesn't share messages with that one means stopping communication with your friends.
> You just switch to any other instance, because Mastodon doesn't prevent you from doing that.
Controlled by another third party. Not to mention that, with enough users, there will be feature divergence so "switching" won't be that easy.
Want a real world example? See email. Open protocol with multiple client-server implementations. However, most people use one of the major providers (Google, Microsoft...), there are incompatibilities between clients and even if you "can switch", it's not that easy nor gets done often. Yes, you can switch to ProtonMail or something more secure if you want, but that won't solve the problems of the 99% of people that will use general providers and won't even know they can't switch.
> We need both. You cannot force Facebook to allow interoperability when there is no other social network.
Right now you could force Facebook to be interoperable and be open source and still 99% of the people would be on the original Facebook instance. Again, it's not a technical issue.
> Controlled by another third party.
Everything is controlled by a third party except self-hosting. Mastodon allows that too. Closed networks don't.
> Yes, you can switch to ProtonMail or something more secure if you want
So you answered your own question.
> but that won't solve the problems of the 99% of people that will use general providers and won't even know they can't switch.
My point is that they are able to switch due to the openness of the platform.
> Right now you could force Facebook to be interoperable and be open source and still 99% of the people would be on the original Facebook instance. Again, it's not a technical issue.
Yes. It's not just a technical problem. But there is a technical side in it. Millions will immediately switch given a possibility. What happens next, who knows.
> My point is that they are able to switch due to the openness of the platform.
And my point is that most won't, and the ones that do will still go to another platform that's controlled by another third party and they'll still need to rust that the platform is not doing things they don't like.
> Millions will immediately switch given a possibility.
Switch to where? To another company that could do weird things out of the eyes of the users? Do you think all of those millions are going to run their self-hosted Facebook?
My point is that privacy and security is not something that will be solved by federation or open source. For open source and federation to be useful in that regard, you need most people to actively research and check that the tools that they use are private and secure. If they don't, they're just trusting someone the same way they trust Facebook now. And most people (that includes most people here on HN) don't have both the time and knowledge to do those checks.
In other words, this is a collective issue. Trying to solve collective issues by individual choices is not the best path.
4 replies →
What does switching to ProtonMail help me when all my contacts are on GMail?
1 reply →