Tl;dr - fediverse probably won't do too much, and it does have discoverability issues, along with migration issues
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Discoverability issues as per yesterdays search giants methods of crawling the web.
It's quite clear that companies like Google and Microsoft are vulnerable in the search game right now.
I mean in the end you're probably right, but if there were ever a time for a well-funded group to take aim at the suddenly low barriered entry, I think this is probably Custer's last stand.
Another paper that equates not changing the world with being a complete failure.
A valid viewpoint, I suppose, but some Fedi-things have certainly improved my life, which really, is how these things work: you improve people's lives incrementally, and not by the hundreds of millions at once.
Of course, that means this is a complete failure because we won't accept anything other than massive global success as success anymore because... reasons?
Not only that but ... here we are. 🤷♂️
pretty brief paper though ngl, it doesn't do much
They define decentralisation as an even distribution of users? Or did I get that wrong skimming the paper?
This seems arbitrary. Mastodon is a decentralised network, no matter how big Mastodon.social is. Lemmy is equally decentralised, even though there's a dominant actor.
The other hubs in the network don't revolve around mastodon.social/lemmy.world. they connect to each other bilaterally - if the central hubs disappeared over night it wouldn't affect them all that much.
I think the notion that decentralised networks can't have hubs of varying sizes is plain wrong, and a fundamental misunderstanding of what decentralized means.
I don't care if 99% of users are on once instance as long as people have the option to create their own instances and build on tech software and content created by the community.