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Why Not Bluesky

2024-11-16 04:00:00

As a dangerous and evil man drives people away from Xitter, many stories are talking up Bluesky as the destination for the diaspora. This piece explains why I kind of like Bluesky but, for the moment, have no intention of moving my online social life away from the Fediverse.

(By “Fediverse” I mean the social network built around the ActivityPub protocol, which for most people means Mastodon.)

If we’re gonna judge social-network alternatives, here are three criteria that, for me, really matter: Technology, culture, and money.

I don’t think that’s controversial. But this is: Those are in increasing order of importance. At this point in time, I don’t think the technology matters at all, and money matters more than all the others put together. Here’s why.

Technology

Mastodon and the rest of the fediverse rely on ActivityPub implementations. Bluesky relies on the AT Protocol, of which so far there’s only one serious implementation.

Both of these protocols are good enough. We know this is true because both are actually working at scale, providing good and reliable experiences to large numbers of people. It’s reasonable to worry what happens when you get to billions of users and also about which is more expensive to operate. But speaking as someone who spent decades in software and saw it from the inside at Google and AWS, I say: meh. My profession knows how to make this shit work and work at scale. Neither alternative is going to fail, or to trounce its competition, because of technology.

I could write many paragraphs about the competing nice features and problems of the competing platforms, and many people have. But it doesn’t matter that much because they’re both OK.

Culture

At the moment, Bluesky seems, generally speaking, to be more fun. The Fediverse is kind of lefty and geeky and queer. The unfortunate Mastodon culture of two years ago (“Ewww, you want us to have better tools and be more popular? Go away!”) seems to have mostly faded out. But the Fediverse doesn’t have much in the way of celebrities shitposting about the meme-du-jour. In fact it’s definitely celebrity-lite.

I enjoy both cultural flavors, but find Fedi quite a lot more conversational. There are others who find the opposite.

More important, I don’t think either culture is set in stone, or has lost the potential to grow in multiple new, interesting directions.

Money

Here’s the thing. Whatever you think of capitalism, the evidence is overwhelming: Social networks with a single proprietor have trouble with long-term survival, and those do survive have trouble with user-experience quality: see Enshittification.

The evidence is also perfectly clear that it doesn’t have to be this way. The original social network, email, is now into its sixth decade of vigorous life. It ain’t perfect but it is essential, and not in any serious danger.

The single crucial difference between email and all those other networks — maybe the only significant difference — is that nobody owns or controls it. If you have a deployment that can speak the languages of IMAP and SMTP and the many anti-spam tools, you are de facto part of the global email social network.

The definitive essay on this question is Mike Masnick’s Protocols, Not Platforms: A Technological Approach to Free Speech. (Mike is now on Bluesky’s Board of Directors.)

What does success look like?

My bet for the future (and I think it’s the only one with a chance) is a global protocol-based conversation with many thousands of individual service providers, many of which aren’t profit-oriented businesses. One of them could be your local Buddhist temple, and another could be Facebook. The possibilities are endless: Universities, government departments, political parties, advocacy organizations, sports teams, and, yes, tech companies.

It’s obvious to me that the Fediverse has the potential to become just this. Because it’s most of the way there already.

Could Bluesky? Well, maybe. As far as I can tell, the underlying AT Protocol is non-proprietary and free for anyone to build on. Which means that it’s not impossible. But at the moment, the service and the app are developed and operated by “Bluesky Social, PBC”. In practice, if that company fails, the app and the network go away. Here’s a bit of Bluesky dialogue:

Bluesky dialog between myself and @mmasnick

In practice, “Bsky corp” is not in immediate danger of hard times. Their team is much larger than Mastodon’s and on October 24th they announced they’d received $15M in funding, which should buy them at least a year.

But that isn’t entirely good news. The firm that led the investment is seriously sketchy, with strong MAGA and cryptocurrency connections.

The real problem, in my mind, isn’t in the nature of this particular Venture-Capital operation. Because the whole raison-d’etre of Venture Capital is to make money for the “Limited Partners” who provide the capital. Since VC investments are high-risk, most are expected to fail, and the ones that succeed have to exhibit exceptional revenue growth and profitability. Which is a direct path to the problems of survival and product quality that I mentioned above.

Having said that, the investment announcement is full of soothing words about focus on serving the user and denials that they’ll go down the corrupt and broken crypto road. I would like to believe that, but it’s really difficult.

To be clear, I’m a fan of the Bluesky leadership and engineering team. With the VC money as fuel, I expect their next 12 months or so to be golden, with lots of groovy features and mind-blowing growth. But that’s not what I’ll be watching.

I’ll be looking for ecosystem growth in directions that enable survival independent of the company. In the way that email is independent of any technology provider or network operator.

Just like Mastodon and the Fediverse already are.

Yes, in comparison to Bluesky, Mastodon has a smaller development team and slower growth and fewer celebrities and less buzz. It’s supported by Patreon donations and volunteer labor. And in the case of my own registered co-operative instance CoSocial.ca, membership dues of $50/year.

Think of the Fediverse not as just one organism, but a population of mammals, scurrying around the ankles of the bigger and richer alternatives. And when those alternatives enshittify or fall to earth, the Fediversians will still be there. That’s why it’s where my social-media energy is still going.

Read more

On the Fediverse you can follow a hashtag and I’m subscribed to #Bluesky, which means a whole lot of smart, passionate writing on the subject has been coming across my radar. If you’re interested enough to have read to the bottom of this piece, I bet one or more of these will reward an investment of your time:

  • Maybe Bluesky has “won”, by Gavin Anderegg, goes deep on the trade-offs around Bluesky’s AT Protocol and shares my concern about money.

  • Blue Sky Mine, by Rob Horning, ignores technology and wonders about the future of text-centric social media and is optimistic about Bluesky.

  • Does Bluesky have the juice?, by Max Read, is kind of cynical but says smart things about the wave of people currently landing on Bluesky.

  • The Great Migration to Bluesky Gives Me Hope for the Future of the Internet, by Jason Koebler over at 404 Media, is super-optimistic: “Bluesky feels more vibrant and more filled with real humans than any other social media network on the internet has felt in a very long time.” He also wonders out loud if Threads’ flirtation with Mastodon has been damaging. Hmm.

  • And finally there’s Cory Doctorow, probably the leading thinker about the existential conflict between capitalism and life online, with Bluesky and enshittification. This is the one to read if you’re thinking that I’m overthinking and over-worrying about a product that is actually pretty nice and currently doing pretty well. If you don’t know what a “Ulysses Pact” is, you should read up and learn about it. Strong stuff.

Privacy, Why?

2024-11-15 04:00:00

They’re listening to us too much, and watching too. We’re not happy about it. The feeling is appropriate but we’ve been unclear about why we feel it.

[Note: This is adapted from a piece called Privacy Primer that I published on Medium in 2013. I did this mostly because Medium was new and shiny then and I wanted to try it out. But I’ve repeatedly wanted to refer to it and then when I looked, wanted to fix it up a little, so I’ve migrated it back to its natural home on the blog.]

This causes two problems: First, people worry that they’re being unreasonable or paranoid or something (they’re not). Second, we lack the right rhetoric (in the formal sense; language aimed at convincing others) for the occasions when we find ourselves talking to the unworried, or to law-enforcement officials, or to the public servants minding the legal framework that empowers the watchers.

The reason I’m writing this is to shoot holes in the “If you haven’t done anything wrong, don’t worry” story. Because it’s deeply broken and we need to refute it efficiently if we’re going to make any progress.

Privacy is a gift of civilization

Living in a civilized country means you don’t have to poop in a ditch, you don’t have to fetch water from the well or firewood from the forest, and you don’t have to share details of your personal life. It is a huge gift of civilization that behind your front door you need not care what people think about how you dress, how you sleep, or how you cook. And that when communicating with friends and colleagues and loved ones, you need not care what anyone thinks unless you’ve invited them to the conversation.

a front door

Photo credit: Beyond My Ken, via Wikimedia Commons

Privacy doesn’t need any more justification. It’s a quality-of-life thing and needs no further defense. We and generations of ancestors have worked hard to build a civilized society and one of the rewards is that often, we can relax and just be our private selves. So we should resist anyone who wants to take that away.

Bad people

The public servants and private surveillance-capitalists who are doing the watching are, at the end of the day, people. Mostly honorable and honest; but some proportion will always be crooked or insane or just bad people; no higher than in the general population, but never zero. I don’t think Canada, where I live, is worse than anywhere else, but we see a pretty steady flow of police brutality and corruption stories. And advertising is not a profession built around integrity. These are facts of life.

Given this, it’s unreasonable to give people the ability to spy on us without factoring in checks and balances to keep the rogues among them from wreaking havoc.

“But this stuff isn’t controversial”

You might think that your communications are definitely not suspicious or sketchy, and in fact boring, and so why should you want privacy or take any effort to have it?

Because you’re forgetting about the people who do need privacy. If only the “suspicious” stuff is made private, then our adversaries will assume that anything that’s private must be suspicious. That endangers our basic civilizational privacy privilege and isn’t a place we want to be.

Talking points for everyday use

First, it’s OK to say “I don’t want to be watched”; no justification is necessary. Second, as a matter of civic hygiene, we need to be regulating our watchers, watching out for individual rogues and corrupt cultures.

So it’s OK to demand privacy by default; to fight back against those who would commandeer the Internet; and (especially) to use politics to empower the watchers’ watchers; make their political regulators at least as frightened of the voters as of the enemy.

That’s the reasonable point of view. It’s the surveillance-culture people who want to abridge your privacy who are being unreasonable.

C2PA Progress

2024-10-30 03:00:00

I took a picture looking down a lane at sunset and liked the way it came out, so I prettied it up a bit in Lightroom to post on Mastodon. When I exported the JPG, I was suddenly in the world of C2PA, so here’s a report on progress and problems. This article is a bit on the geeky side but I think the most interesting bits concern policy issues. So if you’re interested in online truth and disinformation you might want to read on.

If you don’t know what “C2PA” is, I immodestly think my introduction is a decent place to start. Tl;dr: Verifiable provenance for online media files. If for some reason you think “That can’t possibly work”, please go read my intro.

Here’s the Lightroom photo-export dialog that got my attention:

Lightroom export dialog with C2PA

There’s interesting stuff in that dialog. First, it’s “Early Access”, and I hope that means not fixed in stone, because there are issues (not just the obvious typo); I’ll get to them.

Where’s the data?

There’s a choice of where to put the C2PA data (if you want any): Right there in the image, in “Content Credentials Cloud” (let’s say CCC), or both. That CCC stuff is (weakly) explained here — scroll down to “How are Content Credentials stored and recovered?” I think storing the C2PA data in an online service rather than in the photo is an OK idea — doesn’t weaken the verifiability story I think, although as a blogger I might be happier if it were stored here on the blog? This whole area is work in progress.

What surprised me on that Adobe CCC page was the suggestion that you might be able to recover the C2PA data about a picture from which it had been stripped. Obviously this could be a very bad thing if you’d stripped that data for a good reason.

I’m wondering what other fields you could search on in CCC… could you find pictures if you knew what camera they were shot with, on some particular date? Lots of complicated policy issues here.

Also there’s the matter of size: The raw JPG of the picture is 346K, which balloons to 582K with the C2PA. Which doesn’t bother me in the slightest, but if I were serving millions of pictures per day it would.

Who provided the picture?

I maintain that the single most important thing about C2PA isn’t recording what camera or software was used, it’s identifying who the source of the picture is. Because, living online, your decisions on what to believe are going to rely heavily on who to believe. So what does Lightroom’s C2PA feature offer?

First, it asserts that the picture is by “Timothy Bray”; notice that that value is hardwired and I can’t change it. Second, that there’s a connected account at Instagram. In the C2PA, these assertions are signed with an Adobe-issued certificate, which is to say Adobe thinks you should believe them.

Let’s look at both. Adobe is willing to sign off on the author being “Timothy Bray”, but they know a lot more about me; my email, and that I’ve been a paying customer for years. Acknowledging my name is nice but it’d be really unsurprising if they have another Tim Bray among their millions of customers. And suppose my name was Jane Smith or some such.

It’d be well within Adobe’s powers to become an identity provider and give me a permanent ID like “https://id.adobe.com/timbray0351”, and include that in the C2PA. Which would be way more useful to establish provenance, but then Adobe Legal would want to take a very close look at what they’d be getting themselves into.

But maybe that’s OK, because it’s offering to include my “Connected” Instagram account, https://www.instagram.com/twbray. By “connected” they mean that Lightroom went through an OAuth dance with Meta and I had to authorize either giving Insta access to Adobe or Adobe to Insta, I forget which. Anyhow, that OAuth stuff works. Adobe really truly knows that I control that Insta ID and they can cheerfully sign off on that fact.

They also offered me the choice of Behance, Xitter, and LinkedIn.

I’ll be honest: This excites me. If I really want to establish confidence that this picture is from me, I can’t think of a better way than a verifiable link to a bunch of my online presences, saying “this is from that guy you also know as…” Obviously, I want them to add my blog and Mastodon and Bluesky and Google and Apple and my employer and my alma mater and my bank, and then let me choose, per picture, which (if any) of those I want to include in the C2PA. This is very powerful stuff on the provenance front.

Note that the C2PA doesn’t include anything about what kind of device I took the picture on (a Pixel), nor when I took it, but that’d be reasonably straightforward for Google’s camera app to include. I don’t think that information is as important as provenance but I can imagine applications where it’d be interesting.

What did they do to the picture?

The final choice in that export dialog is whether I want to disclose what I did in Lightroom: “Edits and Activity”. Once again, that’s not as interesting as the provenance, but it might be if we wanted to flag AI intervention. And there are already problems in how that data is used; more below.

Anyhow, here’s the picture; I don’t know if it pleases your eye but it does mine.

View down an urban lane towards the setting sun; includes C2PA data

Now, that image just above has been through the ongoing publishing system, which doesn’t know about C2PA, but if you click and enlarge it, the version you get is straight outta Lightroom and retains the C2PA data.

If you want to be sure, install c2patool, and apply it to lane.jpg. Too lazy? No problem, because here’s the JSON output (with the --detailed option). If you’re geeky at all and care about this stuff, you might want to poke around in there.

Another thing you might want to do is download lane.jpg and feed it to the Adobe Content Authenticity Inspect page. Here’s what you get:

Output from the Adobe Content Authenticity “Inspector” service

This is obviously a service that’s early in its life and undoubtedly will get more polish. But still, interesting and useful.

Not perfect

In case it’s not obvious, I’m pretty bullish on C2PA and think it provides us useful weapons against online disinformation and to support trust frameworks. So, yay Adobe, congrats on an excellent start! But, things bother me:

  1. [Update: There used to be a complaint about c2patool here, but its author got in touch with me and pointed out that when you run it and doesn’t complain about validation problems, that means there weren’t any. Very UNIX. Oops.]

  2. Adobe’s Inspector is also available as a Chrome extension. I’m assuming they’ll support more browsers going forward. Assuming a browser extension is actually useful, which isn’t obvious.

  3. The Inspector’s description of what I did in Lightroom doesn’t correspond very well to what the C2PA data says. What I actually did, per the C2PA, was (look for “actions” in the JSON):

    1. Opened an existing file named “PXL_20241013_020608588.jpg”.

    2. Reduced the exposure by -15.

    3. Generated a (non-AI) mask, a linear gradient from the top of the picture down.

    4. In the mask, moved the “Shadows” slider to -16.

    5. Cropped and straightened the picture (the C2PA doesn’t say how much).

    6. Changed the masking again; not sure why this is here because I didn’t do any more editing.

    The Inspector output tries to express all this in vague nontechnical English, which loses a lot of information and in one case is just wrong: “Drawing edits: Used tools like pencils, brushes, erasers, or shape, path, or pen tools”. I think that in 2024, anyone who cares enough to look at this stuff knows about cropping and exposure adjustments and so on, they’re ubiquitous everywhere photos are shared.

  4. If I generate C2PA data in an Adobe product, and if I’ve used any of their AI-based tools that either create or remove content, that absolutely should be recorded in the C2PA. Not as an optional extra.

  5. I really, really want Adobe to build a flexible identity framework so you can link to identities via DNS records or .well-known files or OpenID Connect flows, so that I get to pick which identities are included with the C2PA. This, I think, would be huge.

  6. This is not an Adobe problem, but it bothers me that I can’t upload this photo to any of my social-media accounts without losing the C2PA data. It would be a massive win if all the social-media platforms, when you uploaded a photo with C2PA data, preserved it and added more, saying who initially uploaded it. If you know anyone who writes social-media software, please tell them.

Once again, this is progress! Life online with media provenance will be better than the before times.

LLMM

2024-10-29 03:00:00

The ads are everywhere; on bus shelters and in big-money live-sportscasts and Web interstitials. They say Apple’s products are great because Apple Intelligence and Google’s too because Google Gemini. I think what’s going on here is pretty obvious and a little sad. AI and GG are LLMM: Large Language Mobile Marketing!

It looks like this:

Apple intelligence is herePixel 9 Pro with Gemini

Here are nice factual Wikipedia rundowns on Apple Intelligence and Google Gemini.

The object of the game is to sell devices, and the premise seems to be that people will want to buy them because they’re excited about what AI and GG will do for them. When they arrive, that is, which I guess they’re just now starting to. I guess I’m a little more LLM-skeptical than your average geek, but I read the list of features and thought: Would this sort of thing accelerate my mobile-device-upgrade latency, which at the moment is around three years? Um, no. Anyone’s? Still dubious.

Quite possibly I’m wrong. Maybe there’ll be a wave of influencers raving about how AI/GG improved their sex lives, income, and Buddha-nature, the masses will say “gotta get me some of that” and quarterly sales will soar past everyone’s stretch goals.

What I think happened

I think that the LLMania among the investor/executive class led to a situation where massive engineering muscle was thrown at anything with genAI in its pitch, and when it came time to ship, demanded that that be the white-hot center of the launch marketing.

Because just at the moment, a whole lot of nontechnical people with decision-making power have decided that it’s lethally risky not to bet the farm on a technology they don’t understand. It’s not like it’s the first time it’s happened.

Why it’s sad

First, because the time has long gone when a new mobile-device feature changed everyone’s life. Everything about them is incrementally better every year. When yours wears out, there’ll be a bit of new-shiny feel about onboarding to your new one. But seriously, what proportion of people buy a new phone for any reason other than “the old one wore out”?

This is sad personally for me because I was privileged to be there, an infinitesimally small contributor during the first years of the mobile wave, when many new features felt miraculous. It was a fine time but it’s gone.

The other reason it’s sad is the remorseless logic of financialized capitalism; the revenue number must go up even when the audience isn’t, and major low-hanging unmet needs are increasingly hard to find.

So, the machine creates a new unmet need (for AI/GG) and plasters it on bus shelters and my TV screen. I wish they wouldn’t.

Cursiveness

2024-10-19 03:00:00

I’ve found relief from current personal stress in an unexpected place: what my mother calls “penmanship”, i.e. cursive writing that is pleasing to the eye and clearly legible. (Wikipedia’s definition of “penmanship” differs, interestingly. Later.) Herewith notes from the handwriting front.

[Oh, that stress: We’re in the final stages of moving into a newly-bought house from the one we bought 27 years ago, and then selling the former place. This is neither easy nor fun. Might be a blog piece in it but first I have to recover.]

My generation

I’m not sure which decade handwriting ceased to matter to schoolchildren; my own kids got a derisory half-term unit. I have unpleasant elementary-school memories of my handwriting being justly criticized, month after month. And then, after decades of pounding a keyboard, it had devolved to the point where I often couldn’t read it myself.

Which I never perceived as much of a problem. I’m a damn fast and accurate typist and for anything that matters, my communication failures aren’t gonna involve letterforms.

I’ve been a little sad that I had become partly illiterate, absent a keyboard and powerful general-purpose computer. But it wasn’t actually a problem. And my inability to decipher my own scribbling occasionally embarrassed me, often while standing in a supermarket aisle. (If your family is as busy as mine, a paper notepad in a central location is an effective and efficient way to build a shopping list.)

Then one night

I was in bed but not asleep and my brain meandered into thoughts of handwriting; then I discovered that the penmanship lessons from elementary school seemed still to be lurking at the back of my brain. So I started mentally handwriting random texts on imaginary paper, seeing if I could recall all those odd cursive linkages. It seemed I could… then I woke up and it was morning. This has continued to work, now for several weeks.

So that’s a quality-of-life win for me: Mental penmanship as a surprisingly strong soporific. Your mileage may vary.

What, you might ask, is the text that I virtually handwrite? Famous poems? Zen koans? The answer is weirder: I turn some switch in a corner of my brain and words that read sort of like newspaper paragraphs come spilling out, making sense but really meaning anything.

Makes me wonder if I have an LLM in my mind.

Dots and crosses

After the occasional bedtime resort to mental cursive, I decided to try the real thing, grabbed the nearest pen-driven tablet, woke up an app that supports pen input, and started a freehand note. I found, pleasingly, that if I held the childhood lessons consciously in focus, I could inscribe an adequately comprehensible hand.

(Not the first attempt.)

Dotting and crossing

There’s a message in the media just above. I discovered that one reason my writing was so terrible was lacking enough patience to revisit the i’s and t’s after finishing a word that contains them, but rather trying to dot and cross as I went along. Enforcing a steely “finish the word, then go back” discipline on myself seems the single most important factor in getting a coherent writing line.

I’ve made the point this blog piece wants to make, but learned a few things about the subject along the way.

Wikipedia?

It says penmanship means simply the practice of inscribing text by hand (cursive is the subclass of penmanship where “characters are written joined in a flowing manner”). But I and the OED both think that English word also also commonly refers to the quality of writing. So I think that entry needs work.

Tommaso Ciampa

Oh, and “Penmanship” also stands for Tommaso Ciampa the professional wrestler; earlier in his career he fought as “Tommy Penmanship”. I confess I offer this tasty fact just so I could include his picture.

Pop culture?

As I inscribed to-buys on the family grocery list, going back to dot and cross, it occurred to me that “or” was difficult; the writing line leaves the small “o” at the top of the letter, but a small “r” wants to begin on the baseline. I addressed this conundrum, as one does, by visiting YouTube. And thus discovered that a whole lot of people care about this stuff; there are, of course, /r/Cursive and /r/Handwriting.

Which sort of makes sense in a time when LPs and film photography are resurging. I think there are deep things to be thought and (not necessarily hand-)written about the nature of a message inscribed in cursive, even when that cursive is described in pixels. But I’m not going there today. I’m just saying I can read my grocery lists now.

Trollope’s aristos

I distinctly recall reading, in one of Anthony Trollope’s excellent novels about mid-19th-century life, that it was common knowledge that the landed aristocracy heedlessly wrote in incomprehensible chicken-scratches, but that the clerks and scriveners and merchants, the folk lacking genealogy, were expected to have a clear hand.

The new hotness?

I dunno, I don’t really think cursive is, but the idea isn’t crazy.