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Some key excerpts:

On Monday, X filed an objection in The Onion’s bid to buy InfoWars out of bankruptcy. In the objection, Elon Musk’s lawyers argued that X has “superior ownership” of all accounts on X, that it objects to the inclusion of InfoWars and related Twitter accounts in the bankruptcy auction, and that the court should therefore prevent the transfer of them to The Onion.

The legal basis that X asserts in the filing is not terribly interesting. But what is interesting is that X has decided to involve itself at all, and it highlights that you do not own your followers or your account or anything at all on corporate social media, and it also highlights the fact that Elon Musk’s X is primarily a political project he is using to boost, or stifle, specific viewpoints and help his friends

Except in exceedingly rare circumstances like the Vital Pharm case, the transfer of social media accounts in bankruptcy from one company to another has been routine. When VICE was sold out of bankruptcy, its new owners, Fortress Investment Group, got all of VICE’s social media accounts and YouTube pages. X, Google, Meta, etc did not object to this transfer because this sort of thing happens constantly and is not controversial.

Jones has signaled that Musk has done this in order to help him, and his tweet about it has gone incredibly viral.

X calls itself “the sole owner” of X accounts, and states that it “does not consent” to the sale of the InfoWars accounts, as doing so would “undermine X Corp.’s rightful ownership of the property it licenses to Free Speech Systems [InfoWars], Jones, or any other account holder on the X platform.” Again, X accounts are transferred in bankruptcy all the time with no drama and with no objection from X.

Meta, Twitter, Google, LinkedIn, and ByteDance have run up astronomical valuations by more or getting people to fill their platforms with content for free, and have created and destroyed countless businesses, business models, and industries with their constantly-shifting algorithms and monetization strategies. But to see this fact outlined in such stark terms in a court document makes clear that, for human beings to seize any sort of control over their online lives, we must move toward decentralized, portable forms of social media and must move back toward creating and owning our own platforms and websites.

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[-] chaos@beehaw.org 23 points 4 weeks ago

Bluesky's more like an aspirationally decentralized platform, you can keep your own data on your own server and use your own domain name as a user name, but most of the rest of it is "centralized, but we're designing it in such a way that we can open it up later." Even then, though, it's heavily influenced by the original idea of "let's make something decentralized that Twitter can switch to once it's worked out" which means that even when they do open things up, it's likely that a lot of Bluesky will only be practical at "big tech company scale" to run yourself, whereas Mastodon or Lemmy you can just spin up on a server and it'll be fine until you get a lot of users.

[-] originalucifer@moist.catsweat.com 11 points 4 weeks ago

they also recently stated 'we designed it traffic heavy at the relay with the expectation that only big companies would manage relays' as their admitted 'decentralization' strategy. ya know, instead of coming up with something more actually distributed. it really feels like they have no intention of true federation.

[-] NoIWontPickAName@kbin.earth 3 points 4 weeks ago

Feel free to jump in and help with that problem

this post was submitted on 27 Nov 2024
173 points (100.0% liked)

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