|
|
|
|
|
by geofft
2699 days ago
|
|
> AMP Project is run similar to nodejs by adopting an open-governance model. OK, but the only thing I want out of AMP is for it to not exist. Is there any chance that I can get involved in AMP's open governance with a "stop existing" goal? It is already quite surprising that AMP has gone in the direction of "We'll accept signed webpackages and publish those so we aren't acting as the origin". But my goal is that even this should not need to exist: websites that genuinely load fast on their own, comparable to downloading the webpackage, should be ranked as high as AMP websites. And it's preferable for websites to do that. So there should be no boost for AMP websites, just a boost for fast pages, and if AMP does anything it should just provide guidelines for how to build fast pages. Examples of fast pages include HN and most things published before 1998. At the end of the day AMP exists because it's privileged by Google Search, and AMP is privileged by Google Search because Malte Ubl has whatever amount of influence he does within Google and has convinced them that AMP is a good idea (or other people have decided it's a good idea and have put Malte Ubl in charge of making sure it happens, or whatever). No matter how many non-Google people you put on the steering committee you won't change that. You don't have the internal access to change Google's mind about it. This is like saying that it's okay that I should be happy living in a city that always votes $party because I can get involved in the party. If my personal political views are $opposing_party, that statement is technically true but completely useless. |
|
You can choose not to use it. It's just like when you find a project on Git(hub|lab|etc) and it uses a language, tool, or package manager you've never seen before. You either try to work with it or look at other projects.
If you don't want to deal with AMP, you can click the link icon at the top of the page, then click the link so that you actually end up on the webpage you wanted to visit. You can't force everyone to adopt the "amp shouldn't exist" model just as much as you can't force "electron shouldn't exist and everyone should write native apps" on others.