• 7 Posts
  • 189 Comments
Joined 6 months ago
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Cake day: April 21st, 2025

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  • In the past two weeks, a Project Sail publicity brochure has begun appearing in mailboxes. Featuring images of families in clothing emblazoned with the American flag, the mailing appeared to be an attempt to appeal to the conservative-leaning county’s sense of patriotism.

    That’s so blatant.

    Probably the only reason it isn’t working is that the company behind it is based in Silicon Valley.

    They’re going to have to find someone “from around here”. (And go behind their backs to pay off city leadership.)









  • Leeds told Ars that the RSL standard doesn’t just benefit publishers, though. It also solves a problem for AI companies, which have complained in litigation over AI scraping that there is no effective way to license content across the web.

    "If they’re using it, they pay for it, and if they’re not using it, they don’t pay for it.

    But AI companies know that they need a constant stream of fresh content to keep their tools relevant and to continually innovate, Leeds suggested. In that way, the RSL standard “supports what supports them,” Leeds said, “and it creates the appropriate incentive system” to create sustainable royalty streams for creators and ensure that human creativity doesn’t wane as AI evolves.

    This article tries to slip in the idea that creators will benefit from this arrangement. Just like with Spotify and Getty Images, it’s the publisher that’s getting paid.

    Then they decide how much they’ll let trickle down to creators.




  • “I pay for access to music I get access to music.” And with ChatGPT, you pay for access to an LLM, and you get access to an LLM.

    Just because you personally don’t value that as a service doesn’t inherently invalidate it as a business model, now or in the future.

    Netflix lost subscribers in 2011 and 2022, that didn’t kill the company. Uber stock tumbled during the pandemic and again in 2022. In 2023, Wired was writing about how “despite its popularity… [Spotify] has long struggled to turn consistent profits.”

    This is a whole wave of companies where the survivors seem financially stable now, but had a long history of being propped up by venture capital and having an unclear path to profitability.

    The only thing you’ve successfully shown is different so far is that you don’t think it’s a real service.

    I generally agree, but I still don’t see anything that differentiates its trajectory from the Spotifys, Ubers, and Netflixes of the world.






  • Technically, nothing.

    In practice, who do you know that’s using it and doesn’t run Arch, by the way?


    My point isn’t that IRC/XMPP aren’t technically capable.

    It’s that they’re not designed for non-technical users.

    I want corporate social media to die. Mastodon and Piefed are far from killing the beast, but they’ve made the more progress than most projects have seen in a long time.

    I want corporate messaging to die. Matrix is far from killing the beast, but for a little while, at least it was trying.




  • Damn. That sucks. (Edit: Referring to the comments saying Matrix is dead and dying.)

    I get that IRC and XMPP are more stable and built around federation from the ground up, but… they’re not Discord replacements.

    That was IMHO, the point of Matrix/Element.

    Tell me if I’m wrong, but a significant part of a network’s resilience is the number of nodes and users.

    Without a glowup or some kind of repackaging, IRC/XMPP are doomed to stay niche.