What is Nostr?
sebastix / Sebastian
npub1qe3…zefe
2025-01-21 08:18:40

sebastix on Nostr: "Enshittification isn't caused by venture capital" ...

"Enshittification isn't caused by venture capital"
https://pluralistic.net/2025/01/20/capitalist-unrealism/#praxis
Podcast: https://fountain.fm/episode/qNXfNTpydyMmq7kN6tMz

"It's lazy and easy to think that our friends who are stuck on legacy platforms run by Zuckerberg and Musk lack the self-discipline to wean themselves off of these services, or lack the perspective to understand why it's so urgent to get away from them, or that their "hacked dopamine loops" have addicted them to the zuckermusk algorithms. But if you actually listen to the people who've stayed behind, you'll learn that the main reason our friends stay on legacy platforms is that they care about the other people there more than they hate Zuck or Musk."

Nostr has zero switching costs. There is no price to pay when you switch to another Nostr app with your profile and content. Your friends (social graph) is not locked in. There are fire-exits everywhere if you would to move to another place.

"But it's worse than that, because Zuckerberg and other tech monopolists figured out how to harness "IP" law to get the government to shut down third-party technology that might help users resist enshittification. IP law is why you can't make a privacy-protecting ad-blocker for an app (and why companies are so desperate to get you to use their apps rather than the open web, and why apps are so dismally enshittified). IP law is why you can't make an alternative client that blocks algorithmic recommendations. IP law is why you can't leave Facebook for a new service and run a scraper that imports your waiting Facebook messages into a different inbox. IP law is why you can't scrape Facebook to catalog the paid political disinformation the company allows on the platform.
IP law's growth has coincided with Facebook's ascendancy – the bigger Facebook got, the more tempting it was to interoperators who might want to plug new code into it to protect Facebook users, and the more powers Facebook had to block even the most modest improvements to its service. That meant that Facebook could enshittify even more, without worrying that it would drive users to take unilateral, permanent action that would deprive it of revenue, like blocking ads. Once ad-blocking is illegal (as it is on apps), there's no reason not to make ads as obnoxious as you want."

This is an interesting perspective on IP laws where BigTech benefits from in great advantage. They use these laws to block interoperators who might make it easier to switch to better services with your data.


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