• GenderNeutralBro@lemmy.sdf.org
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    9 months ago

    This is true, but it doesn’t account for one of the major use cases of social media: connecting with specific people and groups you know IRL.

    People are not fungible, and thus social networks are not fungible either. Social media lives and dies by the network effect.

    This is less an issue for Lemmy as it is for Mastodon, I guess. But even so, Lemmy has yet to reach the point where you can find an active community on almost any niche subject, like you could on Reddit or Twitter. Hopefully we’ll reach that point eventually, and it would be a crying shame if it was then torn away by one dominant instance deciding to close up.

    • IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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      9 months ago

      The other argument I’ve seen is technological … where the major corporation starts influencing the software to their advantage … over time enough software changes are made so that the ecosystem becomes dependent on those changes … developers keep getting nudged, encouraged or influenced to make changes or upgrades to accommodate corporates and their systems … then once enough changes have been implemented, the whole system becomes dominated and controlled by the corporates.

      If they can’t achieve instant take over, they don’t mind playing the long game and slowly dissolving and eroding the fediverse over time.