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Chris Trottier

@Xantulon Now you catch what I’m saying 🙂

It is critical to build migration tools.

And key to migration is making Meta users aware of what exists outside Meta—and building a compelling case for why they should leave.

But first we must understand what P92 is, how it works, and how it will interact with the rest of the Fediverse.

10 comments
Xantulon :mastodon: :pixelfed:

@atomicpoet P92 is the scorpion. We know what it is, or should, we may not know whether the threat is the claws or the tail or something else, but IMO it doesn't matter.
I've been trying to onboard people to the fedi for years, I have first hand experience with UX issues, that's not my argument

Chris Trottier

@Xantulon Okay, what is P92? All I know is that it’s a text-based Twitter competitor that aims for Mastodon compatibility and ActivityPub integration.

That’s it.

Will it talk to Pixelfed? What about Friendica?

Will it be open source?

Will it add additional features out of the gate?

I don’t know.

Xantulon :mastodon: :pixelfed:

@atomicpoet I understand the curiosity. Possibly if P92 wasn't being developed by a monopolistic entity fighting for its life, it might be interesting to play with, but it's venom in the scorpion tail. If it wasn't in a scorpion...

australiangeographic.com.au/ne

Chris Trottier

@Xantulon No, I don't want to play with it. I want to first understand it, then fight it 🙂

Xantulon :mastodon: :pixelfed: replied to Chris

@atomicpoet well, we didn't really understand some plagues, but we figured out if we didn't drink polluted water not as many people got sick, or we got rid of fleas, or we slept under mosquito netting. Eventually we understood why those things help. But waiting to understand why those things work before doing them would have been much more deadly. Once understood, we can be more efficient with mitigations

Chris Trottier replied to Xantulon :mastodon: :pixelfed:

@Xantulon This isn't a plague that suddenly appears out of nowhere. This is something built by humans, and used by humans.

You might think blocking Meta fixes the problem, but I assure you that it doesn't.

People who join will just dismiss us as purists while Meta hijacks the Fediverse. And they won't understand our concerns since our concerns won't be VISIBLE to them.

So, how to persuade people to leave Meta?

Xantulon :mastodon: :pixelfed: replied to Chris

@atomicpoet I think you miss my point. The fedi is open, it's not going to quarentine, well bits of it might, but we have mitigations. Blocking is one of them.

The people I know on Facebook, for example, won't leave until there isn't a Facebook. It's part of how their world works. That's a small sample size, but of the people left on Facebook, it seems pretty prevalent. Even when their friends and family are on other platforms, they don't follow. Meta must stop functioning for these people

Chris Trottier replied to Xantulon :mastodon: :pixelfed:

@Xantulon Again, it's not Facebook that's joining that Fediverse.

Xantulon :mastodon: :pixelfed: replied to Chris

@atomicpoet no, but from my experience the people on Facebook are the most entrenched compared to other Meta brands

Xantulon :mastodon: :pixelfed: replied to Chris

@atomicpoet Please note, I'm not saying we shouldn't make it easy, appeal to their sense of humanity, etc. It's just that if they aren't there yet, there will have to be something compelling, really compelling, for them to even consider moving

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