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How Will Lemmy and Social Media Handle Advanced Bots in the Future?

As technology advances and computers become increasingly capable, the line between human and bot activity on social media platforms like Lemmy is becoming blurred.

What are your thoughts on this matter? How do you think social media platforms, particularly Lemmy, should handle advanced bots in the future?

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  • Not even the biggest tech companies have an answer sadly... There are bots everywhere and social media is failing to stop them. The only reason there aren't more bots in the Fediverse is because we're not a big enough target for them to care (though we do have occasional bot spam).

    I guess the plan is to wait until there's an actual way to detect bots and deal with them.

    • Not even the biggest tech companies have an answer sadly…

      They do have an answer: add friction. Add paywalls, require proof of identity, start using client-signed certificates which needs to be validated by a trusted party, etc.

      Their problem is that these answers affect their bottom line.

      I think (hope?) we actually get to the point where bots become so ubiquitous that the whole internet will become some type of Dark Forest and people will be forced to learn how to deal with technology properly.

      • Their problem is that these answers affect their bottom line.

        It's more complicated than that. Adding friction and paywalls will quickly kill their userbase, requiring a proof of identity or tracking users is a privacy disaster and I'm sure many people (especially here) would outright refuse to give IDs to companies.

        They're more like a compromise than a real solution. Even then, they're probably not foolproof and bots will still manage.

        • requiring a proof of identity or tracking users is a privacy disaster and I'm sure many people (especially here) would outright refuse to give IDs to companies.

          The Blockchain/web3/Cypherpunk crowd already developed solutions for that. ZK-proofs allow you to confirm one's identity without having to reveal it to public and make it impossible to correlate with other proofs.

          Add other things like reputation-based systems based on Web-Of-Trust, and we can go a long way to get rid of bots, or at least make them as harmless as email spam is nowadays.

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