The thing that saddens me the most about the whole fedi/meta drama is a thing I can't prove, but that I think is likely because I've worked in these kinds of tech companies.

The notion that Meta is looking to embrace/extend/extinguish the fediverse is laughable. The entire fedi userbase is a rounding error for Meta. They arent looking to take down the fediverse, they're trying to take down TWITTER.

They want the celebs and journalists back. Take advantage of Twitter's tarnished reputation.

I can virtually guarantee that "let's join the fediverse!" wasn't Mark Zuckerberg's idea.

It was probably some engineer that likes the fediverse concept, who had this long-shot idea. Everyone said the top brass would never go for it, but they put together a slide deck and presented federation as a powerful tool to take down Twitter together.

And against all odds, the executive team went for it.

That engineer probably became the lead for the whole effort to federate. Reached out to some big admins to ask ActivityPub questions. Wanted to show mockups to ask the experts if ActivityPub could support their designs, so an NDA was standard.

That engineer stuck their neck out to solve their employer's business need while also supporting open tech.

Put their reputation on the line to do what they thought was good for fedi and bring millions of users.

The response must be humiliating.

@rodhilton I agree with you, but I do understand people's concern over Meta coming into the fediverse.

On the flip side, I see Meta or other big players scraping fediverse for NLP data instead of paying Reddit for API access.