this post was submitted on 18 Jun 2023
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Apparently there was a secret meeting between admins of big Fedi instances and Meta, closed under an NDA, and of course they're not saying anything.

https://mastodon.social/@Gargron/110548174843564104 (Now deleted even from Internet Archive)

https://mstdn.social/@rysiek/110548129223290575

https://universeodon.com/@supernovae/110521648872299829

Somebody already made a pact to publicly commit admins to block Meta

Now we see why concentrating users on big instances is a liability

Update: Supernaut directly stated that he hasn't been contacted or attended a meeting, and went further to set up a page to visualize instances entering the Anti-Meta Fedipact

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[–] maegul@lemmy.ml 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

So, I don't think the NDA thing is really that bad. Corporations do that, and these admins have already decided that they are going to play nice, at least in the short term, so an NDA is the price of admission for learning more about what's going to happen.

There are deeper problems IMO.

  • The big one is leadership. All of these admins are showing that they are either not good leaders or deep down truly think that they own their instance's and their users in some way or another such that they don't need to lead users through this episode but instead simply act as a feudal lord.
    • Leadership here would have started an open discussion between admins and users on what this whole meta thing means, and, if admins had particular points of view, doing to work to try to convince the user base, and then providing safe meta-free instances for those that were not convinced and needed safe harbours. This should all have happened months ago. From what I've seen, close none of this happened, which indicates that the admins or "brass" of the fediverse just aren't good at this.
    • If it isn't competence but entitlement, it's a different but no better problem. The incident where mstdn.social defederated from mastodon.art over a tiff looks a lot like an admin that has gotten used to the power they have over many many users. I wouldn't be surprised if this is somewhat pervasive. And to be clear, it makes sense. If you're putting time and energy into something you'll eventually feel like it owes you something, least of all the sense of "ownership", especially if most of the users aren't donating. Though understandable, it's toxic and easily capable of leading to some bad behaviour.
    • IMO, once instances get to a certain size and stay that way for a while, they should develop a governmental structure like a co-op, so that there can be fresh blood, multiple eyes, layers of engagement from the user base etc. This isn't nearly as common as it should be over on mastodon, and it's a problem waiting to happen.
  • The other problem is that these admins were meeting with meta in the first place. It's a real sign about how they see the relationship ... meta have power and the admins are keen to "play nice" with it. Bottom line is that meta need or want what the fediverse has right now ... users ... they're necessary to kickstart their new platform. It would make perfect sense for the fediverse admins to get together and say "hey, you want to federate with us ... that could work ... here's what we need to know about how you're going to operate, and the series of lines that will result in defederation if you cross them more than once ... cool?"

All together, both this failure of leadership and obsequiousness, are reason enough for many to get iffy about how much they want these people as their admins.

By contrast, I've seen hachyderm (my mastodon instance) and fosstodon make relatively clear statements about how they're approaching the situation and how they're quite willing to defederate should dodgy behaviour arise. The admin of calckey.social is starting a notmeta.social instance (that's literally the domain) that will not federate.

Some of these other admins with their relatively bootlicker postures, however, seem like they want something out of this, and as a user, that's usually a sign that you're taken for granted.

[–] Serinus@lemmy.ml 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Seems like a lot of overreaction. Maybe meta just wants to throw money this way to take down Reddit. There's not much harm in finding out.

Hopefully they insisted on an expiration of the NDA.

[–] zkikiz@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 year ago

This is a very "if Walmart wants to open a supercenter in our tiny little town there's not much harm in letting them, after all our local mom and pop shops will always be available if we need to kick them out!" -- Facebook has done this many times before, by the time the jig is up it's too late to undo.