this post was submitted on 06 Aug 2024
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No but seriously, such an interesting episode.
On one end there's Riley, wanting to turn back the clock to an age where there were forums and communities freely searchable on the internet, and lamenting centralization.
On the other end there's Jakob, making a case that the clock can't simply be rewinded back, and that the solution for a modern internet without centralization is....a modern internet without centralization.
As for Riley's point about "If I join the fediverse, and no-one's there, I'm cutting myself off from culture": This is exactly why these platforms are closing themselves off. They're seeing that even if people want something different (and Riley has expressed this desire throughout the entire podcast), the fear of not being able to keep our things can be a strong incentive to never improve one's situation. And there's no better proof than his own statement. It works.
You know, I like to think of participating in the fediverse as being part of the construction of what internet culture will become.
It's literally a chance to be on the ground floor of the next iteration of the internet. Maybe you'll make something that lasts.
Yes, you don't get to sit back and passively consume vast swathes of content, but maybe that's good for your creative process.