this post was submitted on 17 Apr 2026
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Lawyers, platform moderation, and SEO have wiped it out. What's left is boring drivel whose only purpose is to sell you a product or a course or avoid a lawsuit. I realize some have moved to private groups and there are still sites if you look hard enough. But is that enough?

Federation feels like the right place to bring that culture back rather than let it die or has that ship sailed?

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[–] Melvin_Ferd@lemmy.world 6 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Yes actually.

You nailed something that I'm actually concerned about. I heard this idea the other week and it makes sense to me.

Old heads saw the internet grow. We saw lots of different stages of development towards the corporate owned billboards that it is now. Younger people were raised by it so it's all normalized to them.

There's things older people see and go "that ain't right" that younger people don't. This begs the question, are there things older people should be preserving or bringing attention to that aint right or are am I just in my "I walked two miles uphill both ways" phase of life

[–] chunes@lemmy.world 6 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (1 children)

The single most important thing we can do is try to instill a sense of the rich history of collaboration in computing. That the internet is really about DIY and not passive consumption. We are users, not consumers, who should be free to inspect and modify the software we use.

"If the users don't control the program, the program controls the users." ~ Richard Stallman

[–] Melvin_Ferd@lemmy.world 1 points 2 days ago

I still remember all the talk about the end of data scarcity in the early days. Lots of concern that we now have a new frontier that can replicate information endlessly but that they'll try to lock it away behind paywalls and limit who can have what.