Adam Mosseri:

Second, threads posted by me and a few members of the Threads team will be available on other fediverse platforms like Mastodon starting this week. This test is a small but meaningful step towards making Threads interoperable with other apps using ActivityPub — we’re committed to doing this so that people can find community and engage with the content most relevant to them, no matter what app they use.

  • jarfil@beehaw.org
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    7 months ago

    EEE doesn’t work with FOSS, where anyone can fork a project and go with it.

    Ask Oracle how well EEE worked for them with Sun, Java, or MySQL. Ask Microsoft how well adding the WSL worked to kill Linux.

    Threads can try as much as they want, the fediverse is already full of different projects like Mastodon, Lemmy, Pixelfed, PeerTube, Calckey, etc. and they aren’t extinguishing each other.

    • 520@kbin.social
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      7 months ago

      EEE doesn’t work with FOSS, where anyone can fork a project and go with it.

      The point of EEE isn’t outright destruction but marketplace irrelevance. FOSS projects can absolutely be hit by it.

      Java actually was hit by EEE tactics from Microsoft, and they were actually rather successful. Sun has to sue MS to stop them from calling their Java VMs Java.

      HTML was hit by EEE tactics so well that for years IE was the only game in town and other browsers couldn’t compete.

      • jarfil@beehaw.org
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        7 months ago

        Sun sued MS to stop them from calling it “Java™”, then Oracle failed spectacularly to EEE it when they lost the API lawsuit against Google.

        MSIE’s popularity arose from monopolistic practices by Microsoft, not its EEE tactics against HTML, which failed miserably.

        I would know it, I was there: everyone started making websites in Flash because it was the multiplatform solution, even if it had more security holes than a female duck cornered by a flock of horny drakes, only MS sellouts used MSIE’s proprietary extensions to HTML, only Oracle sellouts used post-Sun Java… and it all went down the drain the moment JavaScript evolved to a point of allowing polyfills to make a single codebase compatible with all browsers.

        Now all browsers are FOSS-based, with de-branded forked versions making the rounds, and it’s good.