this post was submitted on 05 Jul 2023
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Showerthoughts

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If the descentralization of social networks continue, we will have to prepare for the eventual rise of the instances wars, where people will start to fight about which instance is better and which one is weird to be in and so on, but that's for the future of us all.

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[–] scarabic@lemmy.world 34 points 1 year ago (1 children)

It’s not harder than what we’ve had to do with e-mail spam. Which has been enormously successful, with 99% of it not even getting delivered to your spam folder but just dropped entirely.

Instances will het as much visibility as they’ve earned through successful engagement across instances. The visibility of a new instance’s posts will increase over time.

This is why yes, there needs to be a feed algorithm. “Just show it to me chronologically” is the most naive thought, and people still have it all the time. There are just so many fundamental things that need to go into a sorting algo. We’re not even talking about personalization.

[–] Kaldo@kbin.social 14 points 1 year ago (1 children)

E-mail spam filter is funded by google and other multibillion megacorporations though, and they just outright block or rate limit unknown providers. I'd say it's not gonna be as easy to do it with fediverse.

This is why yes, there needs to be a feed algorithm. “Just show it to me chronologically” is the most naive thought

Agreed 100% but again, I wonder if we have enough resources to actually make it good while also keeping it free, both in terms of monetization and in terms of outside influence and biases. Twitter and others spend a lot of manhours on it and mastodon still doesn't have it either for example, it's not even being worked on afaik (or nobody talks about it).

[–] scarabic@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

The trick is to find out how to leverage the community for quality signals, and just support that with good foundations.

Spam filtering is done by corporations but they’re not all mega tech companies like Google. A lot of it is done at the network level, too.

DNS has also always been the prime example of a federated service that works so well we can rely on it as a public utility. Why hasn’t it been taken over by bad actors rapidly recycling their identities? It’s not because big tech has thousands of human agents monitoring it at great expense.

[–] intensely_human@lemm.ee 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

how to leverage the community for quality signals

I say we give each person one up or down vote on each piece of content. Then, people should be able to sort by the sum of those up or down votes (with up being worth +1 and down being worth -1).

I’m not sure, but I suspect a system like that might have content moderation built into its structure.