• qjkxbmwvz@startrek.website
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      5 months ago

      Maybe. Or this will play out like Slack and IRC.

      Initially, Slack integrated with IRC. Which was great! It meant I could use xchat to talk with folks, and could set up simple bots using standard IRC tools.

      And then Slack killed that feature…but it absolutely didn’t kill IRC, because die hard IRC users never cared about Slack in the first place.

      My prediction is it’ll be the same — what sort of people will be attracted to Threads vs a smaller “proper” instance? Probably the sort of people who would never consider a federated platform in the first place.

      Just speculation and I could certainly be wrong…

    • yildolw@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      The Fediverse has 1 million active users. Threads has 130 million active users. This is not an EEE play because a 100% successful EEE play would amount to increasing the Threads userbase by less than 1%. Meta is doing this for non-EEE reasons.

      One possible non-EEE reason would be to have plausible deniability for monopolistic practices. If they make a show of interoperating with irrelevant nobodies like us, they can pretend to be a nice tech company rather than a mean anti-competitive monopoly.

    • MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz
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      5 months ago

      Still just on the first step, embrace.

      Apparently threads didn’t support federating replies (comments) on posts until this.

      And you still won’t be able to reply to the federated comments on posts, just see them.

      They are really not in a hurry to properly support federating. I honestly didn’t realize Threads’ federation support was this pathetic.