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kossTKR | 4 months ago
We need something that's good for small and medium businesses again, local news and get an actual marketplace going - you know what the internet actually promised.
Anyone working on something like this?
kossTKR | 4 months ago
We need something that's good for small and medium businesses again, local news and get an actual marketplace going - you know what the internet actually promised.
Anyone working on something like this?
sharperguy|4 months ago
They are currently experimenting with replicating many types of services which are currently websites as protocols with data types, with the goal being that all of these services can share available data with eachother openly.
It's definitely more of a "bazaar" model over a "catherdral" model, with many open questions and it's also tough to get a good overview of what is really going on there. But at least it's an attempt.
armchairhacker|4 months ago
Also, plenty of small and medium businesses are doing fine on the internet. You only hear about ones with problems like this. And if these problems become more frequent and public, Google will put more effort into fixing them.
I think the most practical thing we can do is support people and companies who fall through the cracks, by giving them information to understand their situation and recover, and by promoting them.
AtlasBarfed|4 months ago
Why would they do that? Do they lose money from these people? Why would they care? they're a monopoly they don't need to care
andrepd|4 months ago
Any new protocol not only has to overcome the huge incumbent that is the web, it has to do so grassroots against the power of global capital (trillions of dollars of it). Of course, it also has to work in the first place and not be captured and centralised like another certain open and decentralised protocol has (i.e., the Web).
Is that easier than the states doing their jobs and writing a couple pages of text?
vladms|4 months ago
A structural solution is to educate and lift the whole population to better understand the implications of their choices.
A tactic solution is to try to limit the collusion of decision people and private entities, but this does not seem to go extremely well.
An "evolutionary" solution (that just happens) used to be to have a war - that would push a lot of people to look for efficiency rather than for some interests. But this is made more complex by nukes.
shadowgovt|4 months ago
The problem is that the divide of alignment of interests there is between new, small companies and users. New companies want to put up a website without tripping over one of the thousand unwritten rules of "How to not look like a phishing site or malware depot" (many of which are unwritten because protecting users and exploiting users is a cat-and-mouse game)... And users don't want to get owned.
Shard Chrome off from Google and it still has incentives to protect users at the cost of new companies' ease of joining the global network as a peer citizen. It may have less signal as a result of a curtailed visibility on the state of millions of pages, but the consequence of that is that it would offer worse safe browsing protection and more users would get owned as a result.
Perhaps the real issue is that (not unlike email) joining the web as a peer citizen has just plain gotten harder in the era of bad actors exploiting the infrastructure to cause harm to people.
Like... You know what never has these problems? My blog. It's a static-site-generated collection of plain HTML that updates once in a blue moon via scp. I'm not worried about Google's safe browsing infrastructure, because I never look like a malware site. And if I did trip over one of the unwritten rules (or if attackers figured out how to weaponize something personal-blog-shaped)? The needs of the many justify Chrome warning people before going to my now-shady site.
pjc50|4 months ago
shadowgovt|4 months ago
Companies have economy of scale (Google, for instance, is running dozens to hundreds of web apps off of one well-maintained fabric) and the ability to force consolidation of labor behind a few ideas by controlling salaries so that the technically hard, detailed, or boring problems actually get solved. Open source volunteer projects rarely have either of those benefits.
In theory, you could compete with Google via
- Well-defined protocols
- That a handful of projects implement (because if it's too many, you split the available talent pool and end up with e.g. seven mediocre photo storage apps that are thin wrappers around a folder instead of one Google Photos with AI image search capability).
- Which solve very technically hard, detailed, or boring technical problems (AI image search is an actual game-changer feature; the difference between "Where is that one photo I took of my dog? I think it was Christmas. Which Christmas, hell I don't know" and "Show me every photo of my dog, no not that dog, the other dog").
I'd even risk putting up bullet point four: "And be willing to provide solutions for problems other people don't want solved without those other people working to torpedo your volunteer project" (there are lots of folks who think AI image detection is de-facto evil and nobody should be working on it, and any open source photo app they can control the fate of will fall short of Google's offering for end-users).
sureglymop|4 months ago
Technical alternatives already exist, see for example GNUnet.
squarefoot|4 months ago
fsflover|4 months ago
chuckadams|4 months ago
These apply to a lot of other decentralized systems too.
immibis|4 months ago
Timwi|4 months ago
fsflover|4 months ago
kossTKR|4 months ago
conartist6|4 months ago
I own what I think are the key protocols for the future of browsers and the web, and nobody knows it yet. I'm not committed to forking the web by any means, but I do think I have a once-in-a-generation opportunity to remake the system if I were determined to and knew how to remake it into something better.
If you want to talk more, reach out!
daoboy|4 months ago
account42|4 months ago
wartywhoa23|4 months ago
But the Stupid Money Govporation must be dethroned first, and I honestly don't see how that could happen without the help of an ELE like a good asteroid impact.
simultsop|4 months ago
What we have is the best sim env to see how stuff shape up. So fixing it should be the aim, avoiding will get us on similar spirals. We'll just go on circles.
botverse|4 months ago