• BedSharkPal@lemmy.ca
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    1 month ago

    Agreed. But we need a solution against bots just as much. There’s no way the majority of comments in the near future won’t just be LLMs.

          • TheFogan@programming.dev
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            1 month ago

            10th largest instance being like 10k users… we’re talking about the need for a solution to help pull the literal billions of users from mainstream social media

            • FourPacketsOfPeanuts@lemmy.world
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              1 month ago

              There isn’t a solution. People don’t want to pay for something that costs huge resources. So their attention becoming the product that’s sold is inevitable. They also want to doomscroll slop; it’s mindless and mildly entertaining. The same way tabloid newspapers were massively popular before the internet and gossip mags exist despite being utter horseshite. It’s what people want. Truly fighting it would requires huge benevolent resources, a group willing to finance a manipulative and compelling experience and then not exploit it for ad dollars, push educational things instead or something. Facebook, twitter etc are enshitified but they still cost huge amounts to run. And for all their faults at least they’re a single point where illegal material can be tackled. There isn’t a proper corollary for this in decentralised solutions once things scale up. It’s better that free, decentralised services stay small so they can stay under the radar of bots and bad actors. When things do get bigger then gated communities probably are the way to go. Perhaps until there’s a social media not-for-profit that’s trusted to manage identity, that people don’t mind contributing costs to. But that’s a huge undertaking. One day hopefully…

          • 9point6@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            Techy people are a lot more likely to jump through a couple of hoops for something better, compared to your average Joe who isn’t even aware of the problem

            • tabular@lemmy.world
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              1 month ago

              Techy people are a lot more likely to jump through hoops because that knowledge/experience makes it easier for them, they understand it’s worthwhile or because it’s fun. If software can be made easier for non-techy people and there’s no downsides then of course that aught to be done.

    • TORFdot0@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Instances that don’t vet users sufficiently get defederated for spam. Users then leave for instances that don’t get blocked. If instances are too heavy handed in their moderation then users leave those instances for more open ones and the market of the fediverse will balance itself out to what the users want.

      • FundMECFS@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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        1 month ago

        I wish this was the case but the average user is uninformed and can’t be bothered leaving.

        Otherwise the bigger service would be lemmy, not reddit.

        the market of the fediverse will balance itself out to what the users want.

        Just like classical macroeconomics, you make the deadly (false) assumption that users are rational and will make the choice that’s best for them.