Threads 正在将 Fediverse 内容添加到社交信息流中。
Threads is adding Fediverse content to social feeds

原始链接: https://www.theverge.com/news/688267/threads-fediverse-feed-search

Threads正在推出重要的联邦宇宙(fediverse)整合功能,包括一个专门用于显示来自Mastodon和Flipboard等平台内容的Feed。这个新的Feed位于“关注”Feed的顶部,按时间逆序显示帖子,不进行算法排序或Threads的内容审核。Meta将此视为一个独立的空间,类似于RSS阅读器,面向希望在一个专用区域查看来自各种在线资源内容的用户。 用户现在也可以直接在Threads中搜索联邦宇宙用户,简化了发现过程。虽然这是Threads中最大的联邦宇宙整合,但ActivityPub仍然是独立的。用户必须选择加入共享,连接单独的账户,并在专用Feed中查看联邦宇宙内容。Meta承认需要教育用户了解联邦宇宙,并解释了这些功能的逐步推出。尽管面临挑战,Meta仍然致力于连接Threads和联邦宇宙,即使最终的整合方式仍不明确。

Hacker News 讨论了 Threads 向信息流添加 Fediverse 内容。一个关键特性是非算法的、反时间顺序的信息流,被视为远离超优化信息流的积极一步。 人们担心 Meta 可能会采取“拥抱、扩展、消灭”(embrace, extend, extinguish)策略,旨在通过独特的特性主导 Fediverse 客户端,从而可能扼杀其他项目。文章提到了 Google 和 RSS、Slack 和 IRC 以及 Apple 和短信的例子。一些人认为 Meta 可能会优先在其“中立”信息流中显示 Threads 内容。 另一些人则为这一举动辩护,强调数百万用户能够访问非算法内容的好处。讨论还涉及开放协议和竞争的性质。它还提出了一个问题:Fediverse 是否能够颠覆拥有自己独特文化的社区?Mastodon 实例管理员和个人用户可以屏蔽其他实例。人们担心 Meta 可能会利用 Fediverse 数据训练 AI,从而引发版权问题。一些人建议使用向商业平台收取内容使用费的许可证。
相关文章

原文

The Threads team at Meta has spent the past year working on supporting the broader fediverse and social web, and is launching its biggest integrations yet: a new dedicated feed for fediverse posts, and a way to search for fediverse users inside of Threads.

Starting today, if you’ve turned on fediverse sharing in Threads, there will be a new section at the top of your Following feed that takes you to a list of posts from folks you follow on Mastodon, Flipboard, or wherever else you’ve connected your Threads account. It’s very much a separate feed, which Meta software engineer Peter Cottle tells me is deliberate. “For everything from integrity to user impersonation, just for user understanding, it’s nice to have it as kind of a separate thing.” The fediverse feed isn’t algorithmically ranked, or subject to any of Threads’ rules or moderation; it’s just a reverse-chronological feed of stuff you follow.

Over time, Cottle says, Meta could mix the posts more, but he’s not sure that’s the right idea. “There’s actually kind of a different use case for fediverse consumption,” he says, that’s more like old-school RSS readers. “I might want to subscribe to Ghost publications, or subscribe to different authors, so I have this dedicated place to catch up on my across-the-web content, separately from a Following feed or a For You feed.” Even internally at Meta, he says, there’s some debate about whether Threads wants to be a fully open social network or should just act as a repository for all that external content.

When you set up fediverse sharing, Threads automatically connects to whatever accounts you’ve followed, but you can also now search for users on Mastodon and elsewhere from the Threads search bar. If you follow them, you’ll start to see their posts in Threads too. This kind of easy discovery has long been one of the biggest challenges for Mastodon in particular, since people are distributed across so many separate servers, but Cottle says Threads can do something like universal fediverse search.

This is certainly the most visible fediverse content has ever been inside of Threads, but the world of ActivityPub is still not a first-class citizen inside of Threads. You still have to opt-in to sharing your posts, you still have to have a separate account to connect to, and you’ll still have to go to the dedicated feed to see what’s new. (If you post something and get fediverse replies, those are still separate too.)

Cottle argues that this separation is a useful way to understand different perspectives. But it seems clear there’s just still a lot of work to be done both on bringing content into the platform and on showing it to users in a way that makes sense.

In general, Cottle says, there’s still a lot of work to be done educating people on how the fediverse works, and even what it is in the first place. That’s why Meta has been a bit slower in rolling out fediverse features, even as the Threads team has more aggressively shipped things like DMs, spoiler alerts, and links in bio. But Cottle says the team is still committed to bringing Threads and the fediverse together — whatever that ends up looking like.

联系我们 contact @ memedata.com