The American “intelligence community” wants to control the narratives on federated social media, as they already do on corporate social media.
- Atlantic Council: Collective Security in a Federated World
- Digital Infrastructure Insights Fund: Fediverse Governance Successes & Gaps
The whole “mis-, dis-, and mal-information” discourse was/is a psyop for top-down propaganda control. The Dem-aligned media did a bang-up job of discrediting Matt Taibbi such that his continued investigatory work into this intentionally opaque system is being ignored.
Good post.
Good lol
I feel like there isn’t much that can be done to stop federated and decentralized services like Lemmy. I guess they could do ISP-level or browser-level fuckery, make the websites slow to load or whatever. Or pass legislation banning anonymity online. Not super feasible options when VPNs are so simple to use.
I think I know what their strategy will be already: Gain control of liberal/conservative instances, and cause the uncontrollable socialist instances to be defederated in order to isolate them. The instances that choose to federate with corpo social media will probably be the easiest to control and also have the largest user base. Running instances costs money without really making any, so there will be admins happy to accept assistance in the form of funding, but also in the form of “moderation” tooling and labor.
How do we solve this issue?
Have something set up so users can donate to server costs etc? I was a monthly donor when I was on Mastodon and even during my brief stint at Beehaw, and I have been meaning to figure out how to donate to Hexbear.
I know it's easier said than done, and there are larger complications for Hexbear regarding payment processors and whatnot; like, how do you accept money without doxxing yourself or your donors?also, I am a dingus who should occasionally poke around the website instead of just using an app all the timeHexbear has a Patreon and a Liberapay
Thank you!
Patreon: 20 members • $65.56/month
Liberapay: hexbear receives $55.87 per week from 31 patrons.
People,
lemmy[grad].ml also accepts donations in several forms (Liberapay is preferred).
I think the best move for people on Lemmy would be to target communities which have a bad relationship either with a new powermod or come under the scope of reddit's disinformation policy because of current events or a change in opinion etc, general side moderation issues (I no longer care enough about to even make a joke related to this),,,
You get communities like Piracy that are more likely to get it scraped off you get those people to divert a tiny bit of collective resources into running an efficient federated site. AskHistorians briefly considered moving to a new site or something but balked because they are worms. Wish they'd made a lemmy.
Similar strategy applies for microblogging platforms. Mastodon has lifted people like Robert Reich and that seems to be the high tier stuff on there.
I will never forgive them for doing stuff like removing quote tweets to "stop bullying" as if screenshots don't work, but I still visit because a lot of the wildlife and insect and landscape photography community, like programmers, is more willing to reach out for new platforms.
Maybe they care more about what's functional than about a brand of social media, maybe it's bc they're all Robert Reich libs but idk there's hella bug dudes on Mastodon so I still visit.
TLDR - Convincing 50k+ accounts to leave for Pleroma or Mastodon would be good for them. Lemmy needs more communities to leave from various sites. Not just reddit. Maybe scope out even weird forums.
I'm not going to do any of this though, it sounds like a complete waste of my time. So maybe that undermines this as advice.