Personally I believe that it’ll make people associate the Fediverse with Threads, which is not a good thing. Edit: It’ll replace their definition of the Fediverse, with Threads, and people may widely forget about Mastodon, Lemmy, Kbin etc.
Considering that the big majority of Threads’ users are cringe influencers, brands that are ads themselves, and celebrities who don’t want to interact with anybody but their bootlickers (who are also celebrities), I would say it’s detrimental to the fediverse.
You’re judging the platform based on the earliest of early adopters. Yes, people with nothing to lose and everything to gain by being on the ground floor of the platform have joined, but general adoption will take a little while. It will grow and normalize. They do have an uphill battle convincing people to leave Twitter, and frankly, ActivityPub isn’t a big selling point. Being able to talk to nerds who left Twitter and Reddit isn’t going to drive the average Instagram user or current average Twitter user to a platform - or else they’d be here. Yes, that’s the side many of us know, but we are not average users.
Yes, people with nothing to lose and everything to gain by being on the ground floor of the platform have joined, but general adoption will take a little while. It will grow and normalize.
So the folks who decide to leave the latest dumpster fire of a mismanaged tech company that shits all over its users (Twitter/Reddit) to intentionally choose to move to a company that has been shitting all over its users (and worse) for years and years, are going to be the ones that will make Threads better, and that we should eventually hope to federate with? Am I reading you right?
Meta should be considered harmful to humanity, not just to the fediverse.
They are. Like, objectively speaking.
We probably won’t find out because a majority of the fediverse will not want facebook a part of it.
I look forward to it. Granted, I wonder at this point if ActivityPub is still on the roadmap given the user count and communication already happening. Their goal is to hurt Twitter, and that’s starting to happen already. Why should they seek out conflict when they’re winning?
I think they will still kind of seek conflict with reddit. Reddit users that are leaving will then move to threads instead of kbin/lemmy.
I’m not so sure, given that it’s more of a Twitter replacement. I think it would capture more potential Mastodon users than Kbin/Lemmy users.
@Aityz @NotTheOnlyGamer @Sephtis@kbin.social
I’m following Midwest.social on mastodon, which is an instance of Lemmy, not mastodon. I give it a 6/10. It’s far from ideal, but you’ll basically come a cross comment chains in your feed. It’s much harder to take in the WHOLE discussion and kind of gage the general sentiment of people on the platform, but it is functional and easy enough to leave your own comment, as well as keep track of specific users replying back and forth. I could definitely see people using a more Twitter-like app as a reddit replacement now that I’ve test driven it myself.