this post was submitted on 04 Sep 2024
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At a more abstract level, inviting a bunch of people to play a game, and then changing the rules of the game, is a shitty thing to do.
The fediverse has rules built into it. It has a way that it works. Changing that makes it something else.
I am not following. What rules do you think are being changed?
Identity belonging to an instance, changing to identity belonging to the fediverse as a whole.
Identities containing @instance format.
Identities being federated.
This is an implementation detail, it's not required by any part whatsoever of the activitypub protocol.
All that AP cares about is that actors have an URL for their inboxes and outboxes. You can have even servers to serve your actor id from a different domain in your instances.
Hell, you can even have no "instance" at all. You can have just a bunch of static files to serve your webfinger queries and bio and even the outbox, regardless of the username that you have.
I think it's fine to have people trying to use a simplified mental model to understand new concepts. But it becomes a problem when people start taking these mental models and try to justify their opinions on incomplete abstractions.
The vast majority of people who use lemmy have not read the activitypub protocol, and signed up to use lemmy as it exists today
And web browsers were only meant to be a language for formatting documents, yet software engineers realized it could do a lot more than that.
It's not just because someone design things one way that automatically all other use cases become invalid. This argument makes no sense.