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Use Protocols, Not Services

8 days ago
  • #Decentralization
  • #Internet Privacy
  • #Protocols vs Services
  • The Internet is designed to be anonymous and privacy-preserving, but centralization on closed platforms breaks these properties by enabling identification.
  • Governments can easily target centralized services with subpoenas or regulations to enforce user identification, censorship, or compliance.
  • Protocols like IRC, XMPP, ActivityPub, Nostr, or Matrix cannot be compelled to enforce age verification or other regulations because there is no single entity to pressure.
  • Switching from one centralized service to another does not solve the problem, as the new service will face the same regulations or be blocked once it grows.
  • The solution is to use protocols instead of services, as protocols are resilient and allow users to switch providers or self-host without losing functionality.
  • Email (SMTP) is an example of a resilient protocol; even if major providers like Google or Microsoft block you, you can still use other providers or self-host.
  • Centralized services can permanently delete or ban users, making them lose access completely, unlike protocols which offer more flexibility and control.