rambaroo

joined 1 year ago
[–] rambaroo@lemmynsfw.com 3 points 7 months ago (2 children)

Source? All the ones I can find say they're still losing money. 800M in revenue but 940M in expenses for 2023. https://www.marketwatch.com/amp/story/reddits-ipo-raises-questions-about-profitability-heres-how-it-makes-money-01f73f04

[–] rambaroo@lemmynsfw.com 4 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) (1 children)

The fediverse just needs time to grow. It's still a very new thing. Growth will take a long time, but the fediverse needs to be an alternative to corporate social media, not integrated with and dependent on it.

It will be more difficult and damaging to defederate later when Meta starts throwing its weight around, because people will become accustomed to a much larger community. The fact that threads has many more users will give Meta disproportionate power over the fediverse, but unlike other open source/free projects, their only goals are to profit and gain more influence over society.

It's best to never federate with them, even if that means losing growth opportunities in the short term.

[–] rambaroo@lemmynsfw.com 1 points 7 months ago

Facebook has been losing users for years though.

[–] rambaroo@lemmynsfw.com 3 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

I don't disagree at all but I can kind of understand why a lemmy instance would block piracy communities. Reddit has many millions of dollars and a squad of lawyers to back them up, lemmy admins don't.

[–] rambaroo@lemmynsfw.com 1 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

For big corps and California based tech companies sure. For most other companies there's very little data. Though I realize that isn't necessarily their fault.

[–] rambaroo@lemmynsfw.com 0 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

Knowingly manipulating people into suicide is a crime and people have already been found guilty of doing it.

So the answer is obvious. If you knowingly encourage a vulnerable person to commit suicide, and your intent can be proved, you can and should be held accountable for manslaughter.

That's what social media companies are doing. They aren't loaning you extremist ideas to help you. That's a terrible analogy. They're intentionally serving extreme content to drive you into more and more upsetting spaces, while pretending that there aren't any consequences for doing so.

[–] rambaroo@lemmynsfw.com 1 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) (1 children)

The article is about lawsuits. Where are you getting this idea that anyone suggested criminalizing people? Stop putting words in other people's mouths. The most that's been suggested in this thread is regulating social media algorithms, not locking people up.

Drop the melodrama and paranoia. It's getting difficult to take you seriously when you keep making shit up about other people's positions.

[–] rambaroo@lemmynsfw.com 1 points 7 months ago

Literally no one suggested that end users should be arrested for jokes on the internet. Fuck off with your attempts at trying to distract from the real issue.

[–] rambaroo@lemmynsfw.com 6 points 7 months ago

I agree, but I want to clarify. It's not about making this material harder to access. It's about not deliberately serving that material to people who weren't looking it up in the first place in order to get more clicks.

There's a huge difference between a user looking up extreme content on purpose and social media serving extreme content to unsuspecting people because the company knows it will upset them.

[–] rambaroo@lemmynsfw.com 9 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

There's nothing ambiguous about this. Give me a break. We're demanding that social media companies stop deliberately driving negativity and extremism to get clicks. This has fuck all to do with free speech. What they're doing isn't "free speech", it's mass manipulation, and it's very deliberate. And it isn't disclosed to users at any point, which also makes it fraudulent.

It's incredibly ironic that you're accusing people of an effort to control expression when that's literally what social media has been doing since the beginning. They're the ones trying to turn the world into a dystopia, not the other way around.

[–] rambaroo@lemmynsfw.com 4 points 7 months ago

Bullshit. There's no slippery slope here. You act like these social media companies just stumbled onto algorithms. They didn't, they designed these intentionally to drive engagement up.

Demanding that they change their algorithms to stop intentionally driving negativity and extremism isn't dystopian at all, and it's very frustrating that you think it is. If you choose to do nothing about this issue I promise you we'll be living in a fascist nation within 10 years, and it won't be an accident.

[–] rambaroo@lemmynsfw.com 3 points 7 months ago (2 children)

Reddit is the same thing. They intentionally enable and cultivate hostility and bullying there to drive up engagement.

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