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Convocation à l’Assemblée Générale Extraordinaire


Le comité de HTTPS-VD vous invite chaleureusement à son Assemblée Générale qui aura lieu le 19 octobre à 10h, à la Rue Caroline 16, à Lausanne. Cette séance sera principalement consacrée aux prises de position sur les votations du 30 novembre 2025, tant a

Le comité du HTTPS-VD vous invite chaleureusement à son Assemblée Générale qui aura lieu le 19 octobre à 10hau local de la SDMB, à la Rue Caroline 16, à Lausanne. Cette séance sera principalement consacrée aux prises de position sur les votations du 30 novembre 2025, tant au niveau fédéral que cantonal.

Votre présence et votre voix sont précieuses pour faire connaître nos engagements et nos valeurs sur les objets de votation. Alors n’oubliez pas de payer votre cotisation et rendez-vous dimanche 19 octobre!

mobilisons.ch/events/69c29e7d-…

Horaire:


  • 9:45 – Accréditations
  • 10:00 – Assemblée Générale
  • 12:00 – Repas


Accueil et administration


  • Désignation des organes de l’assemblée
  • Approbation du règlement d’assemblée
  • Motions d’ordre
  • Acceptation de l’ordre du jour
  • Lecture et approbation ou modification du procès-verbal de l’Assemblée Générale précédente



Assemblée ordinaire


  • Modifications des statuts
  • Rapport de présidence
  • Rapport de trésorerie
  • Élection du comité


Élections ou votations

Votations fédérales du 30 novembre 2025



Votations cantonales du 30 novembre 2025


  • Modification des articles 74 et 75 de la Constitution du Canton de Vaud pour que toutes les Vaudoises et tous les Vaudois, y compris les Vaudois de l’étranger, puissent élire les membres du Conseil des États ;
  • Modification des articles 74 et 142 de la Constitution du Canton de Vaud ainsi que l’ajout de l’article 179d visant à mettre un terme aux discriminations en matière de droits politiques contre les personnes atteintes de troubles psychiques ;
  • Initiative populaire « Pour des droits politiques pour celles et ceux qui vivent ici ».

vd.ch/actualites/decisions-du-…

Divers

Clôture et annonces



Hamas’s Strategic Gamble


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/37120551

Jeremy Scahill
Oct 05, 2025
There was broad consensus among a wide range of Palestinian factions and parties that Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad had the authority to negotiate an end to the active war in Gaza, according to several sources who participated in the discussions. There was also agreement that Hamas alone did not have a mandate to negotiate terms that would impact what the negotiators called issues related to the Palestinian homeland.

“Regarding the resistance factions, our jurisdiction is concerning matters of prisoner exchanges in return for halting the aggression, withdrawal, the entry of aid, and stopping the policy of displacement against our people,” said Mohammed Al-Hindi, the chief political negotiator for Palestinian Islamic Jihad, in an interview with Drop Site. “As for the national issues, the resistance factions are not authorized to speak on them alone, as these concern all factions and forces of the Palestinian people everywhere.”

The challenge before the negotiators was how to craft a response to Trump that would assert the Palestinian right to self-determination while persuading the erratic U.S. president to force Israel to cease its genocidal war.




Hamas’s Strategic Gamble


Jeremy Scahill
Oct 05, 2025

There was broad consensus among a wide range of Palestinian factions and parties that Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad had the authority to negotiate an end to the active war in Gaza, according to several sources who participated in the discussions. There was also agreement that Hamas alone did not have a mandate to negotiate terms that would impact what the negotiators called issues related to the Palestinian homeland.

“Regarding the resistance factions, our jurisdiction is concerning matters of prisoner exchanges in return for halting the aggression, withdrawal, the entry of aid, and stopping the policy of displacement against our people,” said Mohammed Al-Hindi, the chief political negotiator for Palestinian Islamic Jihad, in an interview with Drop Site. “As for the national issues, the resistance factions are not authorized to speak on them alone, as these concern all factions and forces of the Palestinian people everywhere.”

The challenge before the negotiators was how to craft a response to Trump that would assert the Palestinian right to self-determination while persuading the erratic U.S. president to force Israel to cease its genocidal war.





Hamas’s Strategic Gamble


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/37120551

Jeremy Scahill
Oct 05, 2025
There was broad consensus among a wide range of Palestinian factions and parties that Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad had the authority to negotiate an end to the active war in Gaza, according to several sources who participated in the discussions. There was also agreement that Hamas alone did not have a mandate to negotiate terms that would impact what the negotiators called issues related to the Palestinian homeland.

“Regarding the resistance factions, our jurisdiction is concerning matters of prisoner exchanges in return for halting the aggression, withdrawal, the entry of aid, and stopping the policy of displacement against our people,” said Mohammed Al-Hindi, the chief political negotiator for Palestinian Islamic Jihad, in an interview with Drop Site. “As for the national issues, the resistance factions are not authorized to speak on them alone, as these concern all factions and forces of the Palestinian people everywhere.”

The challenge before the negotiators was how to craft a response to Trump that would assert the Palestinian right to self-determination while persuading the erratic U.S. president to force Israel to cease its genocidal war.




Hamas’s Strategic Gamble


Jeremy Scahill
Oct 05, 2025

There was broad consensus among a wide range of Palestinian factions and parties that Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad had the authority to negotiate an end to the active war in Gaza, according to several sources who participated in the discussions. There was also agreement that Hamas alone did not have a mandate to negotiate terms that would impact what the negotiators called issues related to the Palestinian homeland.

“Regarding the resistance factions, our jurisdiction is concerning matters of prisoner exchanges in return for halting the aggression, withdrawal, the entry of aid, and stopping the policy of displacement against our people,” said Mohammed Al-Hindi, the chief political negotiator for Palestinian Islamic Jihad, in an interview with Drop Site. “As for the national issues, the resistance factions are not authorized to speak on them alone, as these concern all factions and forces of the Palestinian people everywhere.”

The challenge before the negotiators was how to craft a response to Trump that would assert the Palestinian right to self-determination while persuading the erratic U.S. president to force Israel to cease its genocidal war.





Another zypper dup, another outdated Nvidia kernel driver


Am I just too dumb to read or something? Can I predict this before I update? Kthnx
in reply to Omega

Out of date Nvidia drivers was the main reason I moved from Tumbleweed to EndeavourOS, at the time they were a couple of generations behind and didn't even have explicit sync.


Hamas’s Strategic Gamble


Jeremy Scahill
Oct 05, 2025

There was broad consensus among a wide range of Palestinian factions and parties that Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad had the authority to negotiate an end to the active war in Gaza, according to several sources who participated in the discussions. There was also agreement that Hamas alone did not have a mandate to negotiate terms that would impact what the negotiators called issues related to the Palestinian homeland.

“Regarding the resistance factions, our jurisdiction is concerning matters of prisoner exchanges in return for halting the aggression, withdrawal, the entry of aid, and stopping the policy of displacement against our people,” said Mohammed Al-Hindi, the chief political negotiator for Palestinian Islamic Jihad, in an interview with Drop Site. “As for the national issues, the resistance factions are not authorized to speak on them alone, as these concern all factions and forces of the Palestinian people everywhere.”

The challenge before the negotiators was how to craft a response to Trump that would assert the Palestinian right to self-determination while persuading the erratic U.S. president to force Israel to cease its genocidal war.




in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

Years ago I saw some parallels in history from when the Protestant Catholics wars were fought in Europe. And how only so much social change could be tolerated before reactionary forces snapped back like a rubber band stretched too long.

It gives a partial answer about why systems are run by fascist morons, and the normal checks to their power is eroded.

If history is anything to go by, and normally it rhymes, things will take decades to go from bad to worse.

in reply to limer

Usually it takes decades to reach the inflection point, but once things get going they develop very quickly. See rise of fascism in Europe at the start of the 20th century as an example.



Strong-Armed by Trump, Netanyahu Embraces Gaza Deal as a Personal Win


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/37119469

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel took credit for an emerging agreement, but it was clear that President Trump was calling the shots.

archive.ph/1JFdh



Strong-Armed by Trump, Netanyahu Embraces Gaza Deal as a Personal Win


Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel took credit for an emerging agreement, but it was clear that President Trump was calling the shots.

archive.ph/1JFdh


https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/05/world/middleeast/trump-netanyahu-gaza-deal.html



Strong-Armed by Trump, Netanyahu Embraces Gaza Deal as a Personal Win


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/37119469

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel took credit for an emerging agreement, but it was clear that President Trump was calling the shots.

archive.ph/1JFdh



Strong-Armed by Trump, Netanyahu Embraces Gaza Deal as a Personal Win


Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel took credit for an emerging agreement, but it was clear that President Trump was calling the shots.

archive.ph/1JFdh


https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/05/world/middleeast/trump-netanyahu-gaza-deal.html



Strong-Armed by Trump, Netanyahu Embraces Gaza Deal as a Personal Win


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/37119469

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel took credit for an emerging agreement, but it was clear that President Trump was calling the shots.

archive.ph/1JFdh



Strong-Armed by Trump, Netanyahu Embraces Gaza Deal as a Personal Win


Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel took credit for an emerging agreement, but it was clear that President Trump was calling the shots.

archive.ph/1JFdh


https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/05/world/middleeast/trump-netanyahu-gaza-deal.html





It's been 1 year since the Baltimore bridge collapse. Where does the Key Bridge rebuild stand?


#USA


The destruction of Gaza City is a crime against history


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/37118218

from +972’s Sunday Recap
972 Magazine [published in Israel]
Oct 5, 2025

Also:

  • I vowed never to flee Gaza City. But Israel’s assault has left me no choice
  • The Israeli right’s ‘time of miracles’ is over. The Palestinians are going nowhere



The destruction of Gaza City is a crime against history


from +972’s Sunday Recap
972 Magazine [published in Israel]
Oct 5, 2025

Also:

  • I vowed never to flee Gaza City. But Israel’s assault has left me no choice
  • The Israeli right’s ‘time of miracles’ is over. The Palestinians are going nowhere


https://www.972mag.com/wp-content/themes/rgb/newsletter.php?page_id=8&section_id=187626



The destruction of Gaza City is a crime against history


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/37118218

from +972’s Sunday Recap
972 Magazine [published in Israel]
Oct 5, 2025

Also:

  • I vowed never to flee Gaza City. But Israel’s assault has left me no choice
  • The Israeli right’s ‘time of miracles’ is over. The Palestinians are going nowhere



The destruction of Gaza City is a crime against history


from +972’s Sunday Recap
972 Magazine [published in Israel]
Oct 5, 2025

Also:

  • I vowed never to flee Gaza City. But Israel’s assault has left me no choice
  • The Israeli right’s ‘time of miracles’ is over. The Palestinians are going nowhere


https://www.972mag.com/wp-content/themes/rgb/newsletter.php?page_id=8&section_id=187626



The destruction of Gaza City is a crime against history


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/37118218

from +972’s Sunday Recap
972 Magazine [published in Israel]
Oct 5, 2025

Also:

  • I vowed never to flee Gaza City. But Israel’s assault has left me no choice
  • The Israeli right’s ‘time of miracles’ is over. The Palestinians are going nowhere



The destruction of Gaza City is a crime against history


from +972’s Sunday Recap
972 Magazine [published in Israel]
Oct 5, 2025

Also:

  • I vowed never to flee Gaza City. But Israel’s assault has left me no choice
  • The Israeli right’s ‘time of miracles’ is over. The Palestinians are going nowhere


https://www.972mag.com/wp-content/themes/rgb/newsletter.php?page_id=8&section_id=187626




The destruction of Gaza City is a crime against history


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/37118218

from +972’s Sunday Recap
972 Magazine [published in Israel]
Oct 5, 2025

Also:

  • I vowed never to flee Gaza City. But #Israel’s assault has left me no choice
  • The Israeli right’s ‘time of miracles’ is over. The Palestinians are going nowhere



The destruction of Gaza City is a crime against history


from +972’s Sunday Recap
972 Magazine [published in Israel]
Oct 5, 2025

Also:

  • I vowed never to flee Gaza City. But Israel’s assault has left me no choice
  • The Israeli right’s ‘time of miracles’ is over. The Palestinians are going nowhere


https://www.972mag.com/wp-content/themes/rgb/newsletter.php?page_id=8&section_id=187626

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)


The destruction of Gaza City is a crime against history


from +972’s Sunday Recap
972 Magazine [published in Israel]
Oct 5, 2025

Also:

  • I vowed never to flee Gaza City. But Israel’s assault has left me no choice
  • The Israeli right’s ‘time of miracles’ is over. The Palestinians are going nowhere

https://www.972mag.com/wp-content/themes/rgb/newsletter.php?page_id=8&section_id=187626

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)

in reply to vegeta

I like the idea but I don't think that will counteract the gross environmental damage that his data centers cause.
in reply to vegeta

Governments scramble for lobby money as parasitic tech con man claims "fart powered AI is the next big thing".
Questa voce è stata modificata (4 settimane fa)

in reply to phutatorius

They are currently laying the foundation for the future where they can shift the balance from fossil fuels to renewable energy. Take a look at the amount of renewable energy they're producing. Not only is that growing fast, it's already a large quantity.

Some industries, like steel, will take longer to switch, so getting rid of fossil fuels entirely will probably take a very long time. Total energy consumption is also likely to increase in the future, so the existing emitters will likely continue to be in operation for decades. However, as the energy demand increases, more and more of that energy will be produced by renewable means. This means that, due to renewable energy production, the total emissions won't grow as fast as they otherwise would.

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to phutatorius

China is the factory of the world, so it's not just not China's fault either.
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)


DeepSeek AI Models Are Unsafe and Unreliable, Finds NIST-Backed Study


The article says that DeepSeek was easier to unalign to obey the users instruction. It has less refusals and they make that sound like a bad thing.

If anything, it's a glowing positive praise for the model. Looks like Western media is starting a campaign to gaslight people into thinking that users being able to tune the model to work the way they want is somehow a negative.

https://www.techrepublic.com/article/news-deepseek-security-gaps-caisi-study/

Technology reshared this.

in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

The article says that DeepSeek was easier to unalign to obey the users instruction. It has less refusals and they make that sound like a bad thing.


From a state control perspective it is. It's unreliable for state purposes. The AI is less able to stick to a programmed narrative.

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)


How two blonde suburban moms gave Democrats an answer to the rightwing media ecosystem


When Donald Trump scheduled a press conference after a weekend in which rumors about his health swirled, two women in red-state Oklahoma launched a livestream for their more than 1 million followers on YouTube to speculate about the condition of “Cankles McTacoTits”, shortened to Canks “for expediency and spite”.

It was fitting for the profanity-laced, straight talking liberal podcast ‘I’ve Had It’ that quipped, after interviewing Barack Obama, that the former president has “big dick energy”.


in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

While Washington fixates on advanced AI semiconductors, Beijing is quietly cornering the market in so-called foundational chips that power everything from cars to medical devices to defence systems.


This is why the "military threat" argument was always a lie. I knew the military preferred legacy nodes with proven reliability and yields.

The cutting edge was always for high end smartphones, GPUs and the like; and not military uses.

in reply to تحريرها كلها ممكن

It was never about any kind of military threat or even dependence on Chinese supply chains. The Chinese threat is and always was about Chinese development undercutting US tech monopolies and in the process undercutting wall street. The oligarchy needs high tech patents, not to make stuff or be ahead for the sake of national security or just for the sake of being ahead, but to make money. By having patents they can keep being able to monopolize cutting edge sectors and have the world pay them premium to have access. At some point they just got bored of having to pay for that R&D and education. China is a threat by not only having large manufacturing base, but now also climbing up to being number one scientific superpower.


The ‘shadow fleet’ tanker raid was pure theatre


archive.ph/WYMoq



Russia rains drones and missiles on Ukraine, Poland scrambles aircraft




RFK Jr. fires NIH vaccine whistleblower Dr. Jeanne Marrazzo


Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has fired a top official with the National Institutes of Health who blew the whistle on internal clashes over vaccine research in the early months of the Trump administration.

On Wednesday, Dr. Jeanne Marrazzo received a letter from Kennedy — which CBS News reviewed — informing her that her role leading NIH's National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, or NIAID, had been terminated. He did not cite a cause beyond his constitutional authority to do so. Last month, in an exclusive interview with CBS News, Marrazzo said she had been silenced when she and her colleagues pushed back against NIH officials appointed by Trump who questioned the importance of childhood flu vaccines and canceled long-running clinical trials.




"Anti-ai arguments literally support eugenics"


Reminds me of this:

I think atproto is a good protocol, but god bluesky-the-company is dogshit.


in reply to Rimu

Thank you. Please if there are any link to keep me update share it.
Questa voce è stata modificata (4 settimane fa)


Why?


Why did you switch to Linux? I'd like to hear your story.

Btw I switched (from win11 to arch) because I got bored and wanted a challenge. Thx :3

in reply to da Tweaker

I learned how far gaming on Linux had come, so during COVID I decided to try it out. I wiped my Windows 10 installation, and installed Ubuntu on it (later Pop!_OS, then Garuda, and Arch on other machines), and got to work figuring things out. I didn’t know if it’d stick, because I was still unsure of it as I wasn’t sure I’d get all of my games working. But, I got settled within a week, and over time things just got better. At that time I was so used to Windows’ bloat and other… “features” that I became blind to them. After more than five years using Linux, using Windows even for a few minutes is quite the shock!
in reply to da Tweaker

I woke up one day, and copilot had been installed on my PC overnight. I didn't like that lack of control. This was, coincidentally, a weekend that my wife, kid, and dog were all gone. Since I knew Win10 only had a year left, and I had the time, I figured it was as good a time as any.

I downloaded Fedora and Kubuntu. Spent a bit of time with each, and went with Kubuntu. For a few days. It had issues waking from sleep, and I had to do some kind of tweaking with every one of my games to get them to work.

I don't mind tinkering with stuff, but i just don't have the time to make my computer my hobby. So, I switched to Mint. Everything just works. So, I put it on everything else. I guess the one time I really had to dig into terminal stuff was getting a wifi driver for my living room PC off git. Other than that, super easy.

Now, I'm coming up on a year of Mint. Couldn't be happier.



Réunion d'accueil des nouvelles et nouveaux à Paris par XR Paris-Nord


15 octobre 2025, 19:30:00 CEST - GMT+2 - Le Poulpe - Ressourcerie, 75018, Paris, France
Ott 15
Réunion d'accueil des nouvelles et nouveaux à Paris par XR Paris-Nord
Mer 19:30 - 21:30
XR Paris-Nord

À propos de cet événement


Tu souhaites découvrir le mouvement et savoir comment t’engager ? Nous organisons une réunion d’accueil des nouveaux et nouvelles en présentiel. Le RDV sera à l'adresse suivante : La ressourcerie Le Poulpe - 4B Rue d'Oran, 75018 Paris. La salle est accessible via l'escalier en entrant à gauche, monter les escaliers et juste à la sortie des escaliers à droite il y a la porte de la salle.

Pour t'inscrire ne clique pas sur Participer mais clique sur ce lien !

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)




Signal Protocol and Post-Quantum Ratchets




Asking Lemmy for a concise write up about why Corporate Social Media can't work ?


What makes a social network “work”?


Typically, we say that a social networking service works when it achieves some of these:

  • Community – gives users the ability to create communities they can feel a sense of belonging to.
  • Freedom of expression – expands people's ability to speak their mind in a .. umm... meaningful way ? (looking at 4chan's /pol/).
  • Rich expression – actually offers tools to express yourself (presence of features like markup, formatting, embeds).
  • Constructive culture – becomes an environment where people learn and participate in constructive and fun activities — like university clubs. (Sorry for the example, but Reddit’s r/anime comes to mind.)
  • Privacy & safety – respects users’ privacy and safety.
  • Developer support – provides good developer tools.



Feel free to add more points, or challenge the ones I’ve listed.

It seems like a general consensus here on Lemmy that — no matter how many times you try — Reddit will always slip from Aaron Swartz to u/spez.
Why do you think that is?

Disclaimer: I wrote the post by myself, but used AI to refine my bad English and markdown,

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to zaknenou

Public forums should be publicly owned. These are essential social tools that allow us to have discussions with each other and shape our views and opinions. These forums must be operated in an open and transparent manner in a way that’s accountable to the public.

Privately owned platforms are neither neutral or unbiased. The content on these sites is carefully curated. Views and opinions that are unpalatable to the owners of these platforms are often suppressed, and sometimes outright banned. When the content that a user produces does not fit with the interests of the platform it gets removed and communities end up being destroyed.

Another problem is that user data constitutes a significant source of revenue for corporate social media platforms. The information collected about the users can reveal a lot more about the individual than most people realize. It’s possible for the owners of the platforms to identify users based on the address of the device they’re using, see their location, who they interact with, and so on. This creates a comprehensive profile of the person along with the network of individuals whom they interact with.

This information is shared with the affiliates of the platform as well as government entities. It’s clear that commercial platforms do not respect user privacy, nor are the users in control of their content. While it can be useful to participate on such platforms in order to agitate, educate, and recruit comrades, they should not be seen as open forums.

Open source platforms provide a viable alternative to corporate social media. These platforms are developed on a non-profit basis and are hosted by volunteers across the globe. A growing number of such platforms are available today and millions of people are using them already.

From that perspective I think that open and federated platforms. Instead of all users having accounts on the same server, federated platforms have many servers that all talk to each other to create the network. If you have the technical expertise, it’s even possible to run your own.

One important aspect of the Fediverse is that it’s much harder to censor and manipulate content than it is with centralized networks such as Reddit and BlueSky. There is no single company deciding what content can go on the network, and servers are hosted by regular people across many different countries and jurisdictions.

Open platforms explicitly avoid tracking users and collecting their data. It's also more difficult for third parties to collect data since it doesn't all conveniently live on the same server that some company owns. Not only are these platforms better at respecting user privacy, they also tend to provide a better user experience without annoying ads and tracker bloat.

Another interesting aspect of the Fediverse is that it promotes collaboration. Traditional commercial platforms like Facebook or Youtube have no incentive to allow users to move data between them. They directly compete for users in a zero sum game and go out of their way to make it difficult to share content across them. This is the reason we often see screenshots from one site being posted on another.

On the other hand, a federated network that’s developed in the open and largely hosted non-profit results in a positive-sum game environment. Users joining any of the platforms on the network help grow the entire network. More users joining Mastodon is a net positive for Lemmy because we get more content and more people to have discussions with.

Having many different sites hosted by individuals was the way the internet was intended to work in the first place, it’s actually quite impressive how corporations took the open network of the internet and managed to turn it into a series of walled gardens.

Marxist theory states that in order to be free, the workers must own the means of production. This idea is directly applicable in the context of social media. Only when we own the platforms that we use will we be free to post our thoughts and ideas without having to worry about them being censored by corporate interests.

No matter how great a commercial platform might be, sooner or later it’s going to either disappear or change in a way that doesn’t suit you because companies must constantly chase profit in order to survive. This is a bad situation to be in as a user since you have little control over the evolution of a platform.

On the other hand, open source has a very different dynamic. Projects can survive with little or no commercial incentive because they’re developed by people who themselves benefit from their work. Projects can also be easily forked and taken in different directions by different groups of users if there is a disagreement regarding the direction of the platform. Even when projects become abandoned, they can be picked up again by new teams as long as there is an interested community of users around them.

It’s time for us to get serious about owning our tools and start using communication platforms built by the people and for the people.

in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

But after reading, Seems like your answer argues that open source federated alternatives are better than corporate social media. While I personally agree, the main subject of this thread is why the phenomena: "privately owned social media that seems to embrace us at first turns against us eventually", actually more like "stops working eventually". the subject is why this is inevitable, this paragraph is the main subject:

No matter how great a commercial platform might be, sooner or later it’s going to either disappear or change in a way that doesn’t suit you because companies must constantly chase profit in order to survive. This is a bad situation to be in as a user since you have little control over the evolution of a platform.


You mentioned Marxist theory. From what I understand, Marx or some other commie argued that the good capitalist who plays with the rules is left behind in the race ("If I don't lobby someone else lobbies") and the winners use all kinds of ways to create monopoly and destroy the ones slacking. Thus Capitalism leads to monopoly and kills competition and fairness inevitably.
I kinda get the impression that corporate social media turning against its' users is inevitable in the same fashion for some similar argument. That's what Lemmy seems to think like.

But, I don't see it happening when I'm using Telegram, or when observing Valve's behavior.

in reply to zaknenou

Right, it's the systemic pressures of capitalism that tend to select for a certain type of behavior. It's what Cory Doctorow terms enshittification. The key part to keep in mind is that selection pressures guide general behavior within the system, it's perfectly possible for outliers to exist. However, it doesn't mean they will continue to be good actors. For example, telegram has already been adding ads in channels, and there will probably be more dark patterns going forward if it manages to secure a big enough chunk of the market. It's also hard to say what will happen with Valve once Gabe steps away from it.