So, recently some fediverse admins (mostly Mastodon) and the founder of Mastodon, Eugen Rochko (Gargron), where contacted by Meta/Facebook for an NDA meeting. We know nothing about it, but we’re pretty sure that it was about this project92 thing that Meta/Facebook is creating to “compete” with Twitter.

So a lot of Mastodon admins already singed a pact to immediately block any Meta/Facebook activity in the fediverse as soon as it comes up. My Mastodon instance, fosstodon.org hasn’t singed that pact and I’m pretty worried.

The following image is an screenshot of Gargron and dansup (creator of Pixelfed) talking about this. These posts were deleted, even from the wayback machine.

  • flatbield@beehaw.org
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    2 years ago

    Only my personal opinion. Seems very odd that they would sign an NDA. The deal is that when two companies meet it is more common that both companies will say that they do not want to exchange confidential information. There might be exceptions to that… but generally one should always say NO. Then only consider if there is a very good reason.

    Other thing I would say is that NDAs have a scope. So you cannot really evaluate the NDA unless you read the document and know the scope. Could have been very limited scope.

    • Dane@beehaw.org
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      2 years ago

      “Then only consider if there is a very good reason.”

      Like money?

      • flatbield@beehaw.org
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        2 years ago

        No, that would not be a good reason for me. Generally I would want to discuss everything you could without an NDA. Keep in mind most of the time receiving confidential information is more of a concern then disclosing it. If I then determined I need an NDA, then maybe it is better to have a JDA (Joint Development Agreement) that specifies how jointly developed IP is going to be handled. I am speaking very generally.

        In this context maybe the concern would have been business plans not patentable IP for example so maybe they wanted an NDA solely restricted to the business plans of the company and maybe it could be worded very narrowly. Not sure how I would react to that. It would have to be very tightly worded and passed in front of my attorney.

        • SkepticElliptic@beehaw.org
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          2 years ago

          I agree, only crackpots who are afraid of having their unoriginal ideas stolen ask for an NDA for a meeting.

          The only thing I can think of is that META is afraid of people finding out how desperately they are trying to stay relevant.

          • flatbield@beehaw.org
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            2 years ago

            The other reason as someone else pointed out that might be going on at the meeting is a $ amount for a contract of some sort. Companies often want to such business agreements confidential, especially the $ amounts.

      • flatbield@beehaw.org
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        2 years ago

        One needs to understand the other party. Generally the other party may likely be looking to learn as much as possible, then internalize that and the project cutting you out. For a simple consulting agreement fine. If you expect to have a long term business relationship or go in with other expectations, that has to be carefully considered and anything not in writing does not exists.

  • magnetosphere @beehaw.org
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    2 years ago

    Nobody in their right mind trusts Meta. What they call a “meeting” is nothing more than an unpaid consultation. They want to pick brains for free. That’s all.

    What do the invitees get out of it? Some carefully chosen information that may not even be true, which (thanks to the NDA) they won’t be able to talk about anyway? A mediocre lunch? A demonstration of Meta’s “awe-inspiring” metaverse technology? Please.

    • Gaywallet (they/it)@beehaw.orgM
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      2 years ago

      On the other hand, you could attend the meeting and offer nothing of value, thus wasting meta’s time and energy and getting a free lunch. Honestly might not be worth it tho, since you’d be wasting your time.

      • Gork@beehaw.org
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        2 years ago

        A free lunch in exchange for an hour of bullshitting? Seems like a fair trade.

        • Gaywallet (they/it)@beehaw.orgM
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          2 years ago

          I’m too busy for that to be worth my time, but I understand I’m in a place of significant privilege. Then again, if it was like zoom I could just leave it on in the background and mostly ignore it probably.

  • comicallycluttered@beehaw.org
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    2 years ago

    I don’t know that it’s much of a reason to panic.

    I expect they’ll defederate themselves when they move to ActivityPub in order to make it look like it’s not “part of some larger network”, a lot like how TruthSocial is basically a Mastodon instance.

    Obviously, we don’t know much about what was said or signed, but I really doubt it’s anything super concerning.

    This reminds me a bit of when people discover who contributes a significant amount of code to the Linux kernel. Google, Microsoft, Intel, etc.

    As much as I hate Facebook, they’re not dumb when it comes to software. React has significant adoption and Zstd is a great compression algorithm, which they also developed in-house.

    And while they weren’t involved, the lead designer of Btrfs worked on a lot of it while he was at Facebook (I think they now also use it as their primary filesystem, I don’t remember).

    Basically, relax. Everything’s going to be fine.

    • Kichae@kbin.social
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      There’s no reason for Meta to use ActivityPub and then immediately defederate. They’re trying to build a Twitter competitor, and they know they can’t with an empty service.

      ActivityPub gives them access to content immediately. And they’re clearly meeting with large instance owners in order to ensure they won’t just block them. They don’t need the small sites to be on board, just the ones with 100s of thousands of users.

      Once they have drawn a large enough number of prominent Twitter users and a good following of normies, they can take or leave the rest of the network.

      • flatbield@beehaw.org
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        2 years ago

        Maybe there may well need to be a financial relationship tool. The major instances will have costs associated with Facebook users if federation happened. They could simply say, you pay your way we will not block you.

        One issue with the Fediverse is someone has to pay. All the users coming from Reddit right now. They should be donating to their sites to cover the huge influx. It costs money.

        • Kichae@kbin.social
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          Oh, totally. Meta’s not showing up in a position of no power and saying “don’t block us just because”. They’re having private conversations because they’re talking money.

    • darius_drake@beehaw.orgOP
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      2 years ago

      I didn’t knew that TruthSocial had anything to do with ActivityPub. Thanks for pointing that out. Let’s just hope that they will defederate themselves…

  • Pigeon@beehaw.org
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    2 years ago

    I would hate that enough to switch instances over it, I think. That meeting could be over anything from being about tracking users across sites, to an offer to pay the admins to stay federated with some Facebook ActivityPub project, to asking the admins to add sponsored posts or comments, to a request for free advice from the admins about the fediverse, to trying to recruit the admins to go work on some other Facebook project. I don’t know. But I can’t imagine this ever being a good thing, when it comes to that company - I don’t touch anything they run. And putting an NDA on just an initial meeting is sketchy as heck - even unenforceable NDA’s are used to threaten people all the time (see: Weinstein, etc).

  • Kernel@beehaw.org
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    2 years ago

    Sounds troubling. But not all of their actions turn out to be completely nefarious, and this could represent a genuine effort to contribute to the next generation of infrastructure. The emerging network protocol appears to offer an opportunity for both non-profit and commercial ventures.

    • darius_drake@beehaw.orgOP
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      2 years ago

      I’m not particularly interested in anything that Meta/Facebook has ever created. Everything that this company has made or touched has been horrible/dangerous/terrible for everyone and I don’t think that this isn’t the case. Also that article that you linked is behind a paywall ._.

      • Kernel@beehaw.org
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        2 years ago

        And that’s probably the wiser assessment, given their other activities. Here’s the relevant part of that NYT article.

        But Meta said it saw no reason to keep its code to itself. The growing secrecy at Google and OpenAI is a “huge mistake,” Dr. LeCun said, and a “really bad take on what is happening.” […]

        “Do you want every A.I. system to be under the control of a couple of powerful American companies?” he asked. […] Meta’s open-source approach to A.I. is not novel. The history of technology is littered with battles between open source and proprietary, or closed, systems.

        • darius_drake@beehaw.orgOP
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          Meta open sourcing their AI is great and hypocritical at the same time. Like yes we agree that AI shouldn’t be controlled by a couple of powerful American companies, but we still need to have full control over the algorithm that literally manipulates users internationally on a daily basis.

      • Steeve@lemmy.ca
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        2 years ago

        I get this is the fediverse and we’re supposed to hate big tech and all, but this “everything Facebook has done is evil” is objectively wrong and such a Reddit take. Facebook’s biggest problem has always been the people that use their products spreading hate and misinformation and their lack of moderation at their current scale, a problem that every single social media has hit, including the fediverse (i.e. Beehaw defederating with lemmy.world). And honestly, with governments refusing to take a heavy stance on regulating misinformation should it really be up to tech companies on what can and can’t be shared on their platforms? Then there’s data leaks like Cambridge Analytica, but that was a ticking time bomb, because data privacy back then wasn’t a concern anywhere. I’ve worked in the data industry for a decade now and it was the fuckin wild west back then lol.

        And then there’s the good shit they’ve actually done. The article you replied to (not behind a paywall for me for some reason?) talks about how they open sourced their LLM AI for research purposes. Their data center designed were open sourced to help other data centers hit net zero carbon emissions (they’re a huge contributor to the Open Compute Project). They’ve open sourced a ton of tools/languages as well.

        WhatsApp is still fully end to end encrypted messaging and they’re pushing the same on messenger now (their WhatsApp site even has a whole section for local law enforcement telling them they can’t provide message data, a huge plus for Americans given recent abortion regulations).

        Their targeted advertising has rightfully gotten a lot of scrutiny, but there’s a lot of misinformation behind it, like “Facebook is listening to my calls” and “Facebook is reading my message data”, which they’ve denied and there’s no actual evidence of. I have family with small businesses that wouldn’t have made it through the pandemic without their advertising platform.

        I don’t think that they have any place in the fediverse, honestly I’d be surprised if they wanted in on it anyways, but in my mind they aren’t any more evil than any other corporation and the “Facebook is straight evil” attitude is just an attempt for Redditors to feel superior about their social media corporation choice.

        If I were to guess this meeting was probably a job offer if anything lol.

        Edit: Lol scratch that last bit, looks like Meta is coming to the fediversee - https://beehaw.org/post/636282

          • Steeve@lemmy.ca
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            2 years ago

            They aren’t Nestle levels of evil imo lol, but yeah I think the problem with most corporations in general is the total lack of regulation and oversight. Ultimately social media is a tool, and allowing anyone to use it for any purpose is going to have shitty unintended consequences. But how do you reign that in at this point without the masses revolting at their loss of free speech? We’re in a mess I don’t know if we can unwind.

        • whofearsthenight@beehaw.org
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          Facebook’s biggest problem has always been the people that use their products spreading hate and misinformation

          Facebook’s algo drives this. It’s a choice that they’ve amplified this content.

          The article you replied to (not behind a paywall for me for some reason?) talks about how they open sourced their LLM AI for research purposes.

          Can’t comment much on this one, so I won’t.

          WhatsApp is still fully end to end encrypted

          still because wasn’t it like that when they bought it?

          they’re pushing the same on messenger now

          Now, as in, they didn’t design it that way to begin with because it wasn’t the profitable thing to do. They have to compete with iMessage, and further, they gain just by being able to tell every cop shop “sorry can’t do it bro.”

          Their targeted advertising has rightfully gotten a lot of scrutiny, but there’s a lot of misinformation behind it, like “Facebook is listening to my calls” and “Facebook is reading my message data”, which they’ve denied and there’s no actual evidence of. I have family with small businesses that wouldn’t have made it through the pandemic without their advertising platform.

          Glad your family made it. Unfortunately, though, this is the masses not understanding how technology these days really works. They don’t have to read your messages or listen to your calls because they’re doing that all over the web and through their own users. The truth is more nefarious because for most people “listening to my calls” is scrutable, while adding tracking cookies across the web or computing social graphs based on your contact info being shared without your consent by a few of your friends, or doing some ML on every photo shared is not.

          I don’t think that they have any place in the fediverse, honestly I’d be surprised if they wanted in on it anyways

          Agreed.

          If I were to guess this meeting was probably a job offer if anything lol.

          Disagree. Fediverse and it’s growth as it stands now is not good for Facebook, so they’re trying to head it off at the pass. I’d be willing to bet this meeting was a feeler for them and I hope Eugen and others are smart enough of to say basically nothing, and they’re continuing the grand tradition of embrace, extend, extinguish.

          Is Meta evil? No. They’re probably not a standard deviation away from any other org in terms of how many are “evil” but their incentives today all align to a worse outcome for humanity. It’s kinda worse - it’s a collection of incredibly smart people compartmentalized enough from the “evil” the org does. Actually, don’t know that I would say “evil” so much as “sociopathic.”

          Meta should get no passes, and be met with absolute scrutiny related to the fediverse.

          • Steeve@lemmy.ca
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            2 years ago

            Facebook’s algo drives this. It’s a choice that they’ve amplified this content.

            Facebook’s algo drives interaction, human interaction with this content amplifies this content, just like pretty much every other algorithm. Ragebait sells unfortunately, but this isn’t anything new. Seen any news channel since the 24 hour news cycle was introduced?

            still because wasn’t it like that when they bought it?

            This is a response to “everything Meta touches turns to shit”. WhatsApp is a fine example.

            Now, as in, they didn’t design it that way to begin with because it wasn’t the profitable thing to do. They have to compete with iMessage, and further, they gain just by being able to tell every cop shop “sorry can’t do it bro.”

            No, because it wasn’t a priority when Messenger was built in 2011 lol. Don’t rewrite history with what you know today, I don’t know if you remember the internet back then, but it was the wild west. Data privacy was not a concern to many.

            The truth is more nefarious because for most people “listening to my calls” is scrutable, while adding tracking cookies across the web

            This one is more subjective, because to avoid the tracking you can just not use Facebook. If they don’t have your personal information they aren’t tracking you, they only know some person somewhere interactioned on a site that has Facebook Pixel. They don’t even collect your IP address, hence why they use cookies for tracking here.

            Not to mention this is all to sell targeted ads, so “evil” would be dramatic imo. Just a company doing what a company does.

            or computing social graphs based on your contact info being shared without your consent by a few of your friends,

            This isn’t true until actual proof is provided.

            or doing some ML on every photo shared is not.

            Also subjective, just don’t use Facebook if you believe this to be the case. Their ML models don’t care about you if it can’t target you with ads.

            Is Meta evil? No. […] Actually, don’t know that I would say “evil” so much as “sociopathic.”

            “Meta is evil” is what I was discussing. Sociopathic sure, just like every profit driven corporation, but to change this we’d need to unwind our society from profit driven entirely, which I’m all for, but that’s a whole other conversation.

            I’m just really hoping that this place doesn’t get obsessed with Facebook ragebait like Reddit did.

            • whofearsthenight@beehaw.org
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              Facebook’s algo is a deliberate choice. If the only problem was with what the humans who use the service did, why doesn’t reddit, tumblr, instagram, or previous to Elon, twitter have the same level of drivel constantly circulating their top posts? On other corner of the internet, trolls like Dan Bongino don’t get any real traction because they don’t hold any views that most people actually have. On FB, at least around the last time I cared about looking, 5-8 of the top 10 posters on FB would be extremely niche on any other social media sites, and should be even more niche on facebook since they represent an extremely tiny piece of the real world and facebook has a far larger sample size than just about any other company.

              Also, re: messenger encryption and not looking back with hindsight, another messaging app also came out in 2011 with E2E - iMessage. WhatsApp added support for E2E in August of 2012. Why did it take facebook so long?

              On Facebook’s nefarious practices creating your social graph - I deleted my facebook account in like 2016. During the pandemic I, admiittedly, compromised my moral position on facebook and created an account to use marketplace. How, without me telling Facebook just about any real info, do you surmise they were able to suggest to me people I know IRL that I didn’t even know when I had a facebook account previously, while also using mostly fake info (slightly changed name, I think the only thing I used was my phone number and even that had changed since I’d previously used FB.)

              Re: photos and “just don’t use facebook.” There is not really a way in modern society to really do that. I upload nothing to FB, but it’s already extremely difficult to not get people you know not to include you in pictures uploaded to social media, and tbh I don’t try because it’s just the default for most people these days, much less people you don’t know or don’t know well.

              I don’t think discussion of Meta as a company can really go too far without turning into ragebait, and deservedly so. They’re basically the Ma Bell of the modern age, we just don’t have regulators with the stones to do anything about it these days.

    • soundasleep@kbin.social
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      2 years ago

      Keep in mind XMPP had similar sorts of activity back when chat apps were the rage, and in the end the protocol was added to Google Talk (now dead), AIM (now removed), Facebook (now removed), and Skype (now removed). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XMPP#Non-native_deployments

      I suspect existing orgs will want to contribute just as long as it takes to steal users and build a garden, that they can then wall off.

      • polygon@kbin.social
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        The Silicon Valley way of doing things is “growth at any cost”. Of course Meta wants in on what might turn out to be the next big thing. Of course they want to use money and power to dominate the protocol, insert all sorts of monetization, and ruin the whole thing. And when it doesn’t work out because they’ve done the same dumb shit that already ruined Facebook and Reddit the protocol have been destroyed and rendered useless. Meta goes back to Facebook and Instagram while the entire Fediverse project becomes defunct.

        This is the history of these companies. Thankfully “fediverse” is not something Meta can just outright buy and then destroy, but they can still throw their weight around with cash and the enshittification will quickly ensue. The Fediverse needs to resist. It’s hard to say no to money, but VC capital is what is destroying the internet. We need to do this differently if we want it to succeed.

      • flatbield@beehaw.org
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        Yes. I was thinking the same thing. XMPP is a great example. They could have all federated, but then they chose not to. This will be the exact plan presumably.

      • killick@kbin.social
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        2 years ago

        I see you have been paying attention. Past behavior is the best predictor of future behavior, so I would say your prediction is right.

  • worfamerryman@beehaw.org
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    2 years ago

    It’s ok that fosstodon didn’t sign the pact. We literally do not know anything about it.

    If it is pretty harmless, then let the user decide if they want that blocked.

    If it’s terrible and you want to be on a platform that blocks it for all users, then just migrate your account.

    • darius_drake@beehaw.orgOP
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      I think that it would be a wiser decision to block the Meta platform anyway, because it will have a lot of traffic and it will overload other smaller instances (If I’m not mistaken). I agree with you that this is harmless for the time being, but an NDA is still a bad sign. I like Fosstodon, so I won’t move to any other instance for now.

      • worfamerryman@beehaw.org
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        I did not consider how the traffic would affect smaller instances. But would it really be a problem for them if their user base doesn’t grow and only consumes content from those sources?

        Either way, I’m reading 20-100 things per day. Who cares where it comes from.

        Just them posting in a meta thing shouldn’t really increase my traffic.

  • onyx@kbin.social
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    I don’t really know much about NDA’s but giving the benefit of the doubt, and considering the size of Facebook. It could just be them trying to cover their own asses with an NDA.
    Imagine an enthusiastic Facebook developer joining the conversation with the Mastodon dev and slipping up on some other in-house project out of excitement. An NDA would probably cover that sort of thing? Just speculating at this point :)
    Idk…, for now I’ll wait it out and see what comes of it.

    • darius_drake@beehaw.orgOP
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      That’s also a possibility, maybe they don’t want anything about Project92 to be disclosed at the moment. I’m still worried.

  • altz3r0@beehaw.org
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    They only really need mastodon.social to be on board, as their brand itself can do the rest to compete with twitter, so this discussion is kinda of moot.

    I personally don’t like it for mastodon, that will definitely lower the standards and bring a lot of advertising wether we like it or not. For other fediverse communities however, I think this is a good thing. It will be much easier to bring the people we want to it once the fediverse is more “popularized”.

    • SkepticElliptic@beehaw.org
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      They won’t moderate properly. They don’t moderate products they have now. It’s going to attract so much spam, scammers, botting, account harvesting, and everything else that ruins online communities.

      The only thing I can see working is if they simply make it simple to set up and host instances. Even then, they’ll dig their claws into it and mess it up.

      They can’t even make the most popular reselling platforms in the world work properly.

  • lixus98@kbin.social
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    As long as it doesn’t affect established platforms and services like pixelfed I don’t really care what Meta does.

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          Yes but AFAIK they’re not being systematically ingested by Meta. I assume that’s their goal here.

          • flatbield@beehaw.org
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            They probably are by Google at least to index them for search and whatever else they are doing. Same by Microsoft for Bing. Who knows who else is doing what.

            • TheBaldness@beehaw.org
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              And I guess this is an inherent flaw with the fediverse. We still don’t really control our content.

              • SkepticElliptic@beehaw.org
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                Well, you can’t really have it both ways. There’s tons of content on Facebook that isn’t indexed by anyone and good luck using search on that site.

                You can either have the walled private garden, or you can have an open forum.

      • lixus98@kbin.social
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        I do, but the same could be applied to every bad actor on the fediverse, all your info of your profile is free for everyone to sell

  • M. Orange@beehaw.org
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    2 years ago

    Definitely a weird occurrence. Also not sure if that NDA would even be enforceable depending on the content of the meeting, but I’m not a lawyer or even close to it.

    I do see Eugen’s point that knowing is better than not knowing—doesn’t mean that he supports it—though dansup’s response doesn’t exactly inspire confidence in me.