Actions have consequences.
I warned everyone for literally years that I would create a fediverse search tool if I didn't get anybody to play with. I got tired of bluffing.
btw, if "people might not like that smh read the room" was a valid reason to shut someone down, the civil rights movement would not have happened.
Fact of the matter is, I'm allowed to have hobbies. I'm allowed to keep myself busy. I'm allowed to do... anything I want, that's not illegal. And the cops already told me there's no issue with as:Public... but they did want to let me know about the volume of phone calls.
@iron_bug You too can make yourself 100% invisible to the FSB, CIA, MI5, Santa Claus, and all the other surveillance groups who were 100% unable to listen to public statuses posted publicly to public timelines on a decentralized public social media network, before some unemployed autist wrote a few hundred lines of Python.
@iron_bug
So you admit that as:Public isn't exactly a feat of engineering and technical prowess, but a demonstration of how any sufficiently motivated loser can build a tool to collect public statuses that were posted publicly to public timelines?
Privacy scopes work across fediverse software packages. That's why there's an interoperable standard!
At the end of the day, it sounds like zoomers need to learn something that's been drilled into previous generations heads for decades: If you post it on the Internet, it's there forever.
The experience and usability of the social network, to people who are actually interested in social network, far outstrips any competing desires from people who are a) Using the software incorrectly and b) Being gatekeeping shitbags about it. For every post from someone complaining that as:Public is "harmful", I can show you 5 others complaining about the lack of discoverability and full-text search on fedi.
Finally, I need a gig. I was told to make a software project that people would use so I could put it on my resume. In fact, 2 out of every 3 people who gave advice on this front, gave this specific advice.
In a world where I need a job so I can stop stealing cryptocurrency from druglords on other continents, *or* someone to play League with... If people want as:Public to not exist, they've got precisely two options: Send me an offer letter, or queue up.
And if as:Public is truly as dangerous as people claim, either of those two outs should be considered vastly preferable to the alternative.
0.1.5 releases today.
@iron_bug @coin Again, this hinges on one central idea that everyone's kinda painting over as quickly as they expose it: The idea that putin, xi, a future american dictator, any of these people who command massive militaries and surveillance agencies with equally massive research departments, were 100% incapable of doing anything my tool does before I wrote it.
If somebody is claiming that as:Public is harmful because of these entities, or any of their caliber, then they are necessarily accepting that premise.
So as long as people say "b-but putler!", they have to defend the ridiculous idea that putin couldn't snap his fingers and have как:публичный in his hands within two weeks.
@iron_bug @coin If these were private "indoor" communities, that argument might hold some weight.
Twitter and clones such as Mastodon and Pleroma are public soapboxes. It's the digital equivalent of your own platform, your own stage, your own pulpit, your own nationally syndicated talk show. An as:Public collector is the equivalent of standing in the crowd and writing down what is said.
There's nothing private about it. Therefore there's nothing perverse, titillating, or otherwise exciting or unusual by watching. I can't imagine somebody who would shout into a bullhorn as loud as they can and then get upset when someone in the apartment building across the street writes it down.
I've noticed that pretty much the only strategy by antiscrapers is just to appeal to some concept that is already looked down upon as bad; Putin, voyeurism, etc., and then both my tool and social media itself are contorted to fit this narrative.
@iron_bug @coin "That guy is writing down things that I shout into this bullhorn!"
"Have you considered not shouting into a bullhorn?"
"The world doesn't owe that guy shit. He's nobody."
"Then I guess it's not that big of a problem then, sport."
As for the blocking and etc., that's peoples prerogative. Just like it's mine to make a search engine. People were being awful to me well before I made a search engine, btw. It's sorta why I made it. If everyone wants to pretend I'm a supervillain, then a supervillain they will have made.
>when you attack people - they will attack you in response
Yes, this is the general idea. People attacked me, so I made a fedi search engine, which for some odd reason, they see as an attack.
>sooner or later life will teach you its lessons
Better people have tried. They're all in prison now. Just btw, this is all the shit I've dealt with. Nobody cried for me. It's one of the reasons people calling a search engine "harassment" falls flat for me.
https://ligma.pro/@r000t/108598931684628458