Why most lemmy instances blocked threads
Why most lemmy instances blocked threads
İsn't more user=more content what is wrong with Instagram threads (sorry for my bad English)
Why most lemmy instances blocked threads
İsn't more user=more content what is wrong with Instagram threads (sorry for my bad English)
There are multiple reasons depending on who you ask and the specific instance:
which IMO is a bit silly - Meta can and probably is scraping all the available public information anyway, defederating doesn’t really fix that
If they're federated everything gets sent to them automatically.
If they're not, they only get the info users see, and it's a hassle to compile index and store. Like they could keep a running index of every user page, but why would they?
The only information that actually gets federated to other servers is public information that is globally visible anyway. Fediverse servers don't (or at least SHOULDN'T) trust each other.
It's not actually that hard to index and store the information, especially if you just want textual post data - Mastodon at least can serve you an easy to parse version of a user's posts if you request it. Sure you need to poll for the information rather than it just being sent to you, but I think if they were motivated enough they could do it.
Easy to spin up a scrapper server that isn't threads to collect data.
Thank you for answering my question
Privacy - Meta has a really bad track record of user privacy. There is the worry that federating with them will result in them scraping user data from users (which IMO is a bit silly - Meta can and probably is scraping all the available public information anyway, defederating doesn’t really fix that).
Yeah, I was gonna say...as things stand, the privacy situation on the Threadiverse is in many respects weaker than on, say, Reddit. Yeah, you get to choose the third-party app that may live on a phone, or the Web client, and your instances only directly pushes some data out via federation.
However, if you're on the Threadiverse, then you have no idea what a given Threadiverse instance out there pulling in federated data is storing. You don't know how secure your instances is, even if your instance admin has the best intentions. Unless your instance is whitelisting a very limited set of trusted instances or isn't federating at all and is private, treating anything you put out there as basically accessible to every organization and company is probably a good idea.
Your own instance may not retain deleted (including by mods or admins) or edited comments, but it's a good bet that if someone else's instance isn't yet, they will, and they'll permit recovering them. There were people doing this on Reddit via pushshift.io.
It's probably possible to have people analyzing comment activity to detect where someone's instance is, based on time-of-day and holiday and so forth activity; people had several sites doing this for Reddit.
And it's probably not that hard to obtain a user's IP address, so either you want to be okay with what you're posting maybe being linked to your IP or avoid having a persistent IP, like, via use of a VPN or something. Probably possible for someone to at least roughly geolocate an IP. Might be possible to correlate it with other logs; if someone, for example, has access to someone's Steam login history and can link that to an identity and can link both to an IP address at different times, they can probably deanonymize a user.
There are also text classifiers that can run on comments, extract things like someone's likely gender and anything else that you've trained a statistical text classifier on a large-enough corpus. Probably can get at least approximate age, and I've seen classifiers that aim at identifying roughly where someone lives. Some famous examples of deanonymization via text:
With Reddit or similar, Reddit's probably gonna data-mine what they can and may sell it to some parties, but they also probably won't be directly feeding it to random unsavory person, though it may wind up in their hands.
There are probably a couple of good ways that lemmy/kbin could legitimately improve privacy.
Not trying to shame ya or anything, just educate. This was a very easy thing to find using the lemmy search function, here's the top result when searching "meta threads".
Edit: I share site functionality and link a very thorough discussion that is relevant to the question and still get downvotes. Awesome, yall have a great day.
Where is the Is search thing?
they are afraid that they wont be able to stop themselves from utilizing any of Threads bells and whistles thereby making themselves dependant, or that they are incapable of moderating sub-scripted content flowing from Threads.
most just hate meta so very very much as to not want to associate with them.