Poll: How should the Social Web Foundation engage with Meta?
submitted a month ago by The Nexus of Privacy@lemmy.blahaj.zone
infosec.exchange/@thenexusofprivacy/11328377710…
The Social Web Foundation (SWF) is a new non-profit with a mission of "a growing, healthy, financially viable and multi-polar Fediverse”. In TechCrunch, Sarah Perez reported that SWF has "some backing" from Meta as well as Flipboard, Ghost, Mastodon, and others as well as a "large grant" from the Ford Foundation. "In total, SWF is closing in on $1 million in financial support."
One of the hot buttons in the discussion is SWF's relationship with Meta. So I set up a series of polls on Mastodon. Here are the options for this one -- I'm not sure how to do polls on Lemmy, so please leave your thoughts in the comments
- SWF shouldn't engage with Meta at all
- SWF should work with Meta occasionally, when it's necessary
- SWF should work with Meta together often, but no formal relationship
- SWF should have Meta as a partner, advisor, or some other formal relatoinship, but no funding
- SWF should take funding from Meta, but no formal relationship
- SWF should take funding from Meta *and* a formal relatiionship
Facebook and it's ilk are the reason I moved away from other forms of social media and internet community.
Working with them in any form seems like a great way to poison the waters if the fediverse.
There should be zero collaboration.
Facebook has no plans to federate, to my knowledge.
Threads is federating with Mastodon
https://fediversereport.com/last-week-in-fediverse-ep-86/
I'm aware. We were talking about Facebook.
www.facebook.com
Considering the thread title of "Meta", the fact that Meta used to be called Facebook, and Albatross's wording "and it's ilk", it should be safe to assume we are talking about Meta as a whole and not just Facebook.com.
I have no idea what "ilk" means. I assumed it's another one of those zoomer phrases like "no cap", "ick" or "smh".
SWF shouldn't engage with Meta at all
I'm totally fine with the SWF engaging with Meta just like they would any other entity building software using ActivityPub.
*Funding* on the other hand is a different story. It sounds like Meta contributed to an overall fund in order to launch the SWF. OK, I suppose — but if there's specific funding down the road for some specific project or funding in some way which appears to influence decision-making on which projects to work on or how to approach them, that's when I have a *huge* problem with it.
They don't "need" the SWF. If Zuckerberg wanted to simply takeover the control of ActivityPub, they could just use their existing devrel people that work with the W3C and push the changes directly at the "authoritative" organization.
Gah, don't give them ideas! 😨
My point is that we should take their current approach as a *good* thing.
I"m not saying that we should blindly trust them, but I am saying that if we want corporations to Do The Right Things, then it's a
lot better to let them have a seat at the table and participate with the community than to simply ostracize them forever because of their past wrongdoings.
Agreed that there's a difference between funding and other kinds of engagement -- and a difference between initial funding to get them off the ground. Right now it's not exactly clear what funding Meta's contributed and what the longer-term plans are. One of the other polls in the thread was about transparency, and (at least so far) 90% of the respondents are saying that SWF should be transparent about the funding it's getting from Meta. And, another poll zeroes in on funding and has different options for initial and up-front, and whether or not there are any strings attached.
i am not anti-threads, but i dont think they deserve a place at the table. no engagement.
No engagement at all. Seems that the SWF wanted to be "chickens supporting KFC", where the KFC is Meta.
They should issue guidelines that Meta could follow if they chose to.
There should be no arrangement further than that.
SWF should work with Meta occasionally, when it's necessary