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by Andrew_nenakhov
1629 days ago
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And his arguments in favour of centralization are flawed. Sure, regular people do not want to run their own (email, chat, etc) servers. But they DO want to be able to chose from a handful of available servers the one they like best (or the one they trust most), without losing connectivity with their contacts. Tired of Google's shenanigans, move from Gmail to Protonmail, tell your contacts your new email, set up an autoresponder, all is fine. When you move away from a centralized silo like Signal, you'll have to move all your chat buddies with you to a new platform. |
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Network effects aside, consider the difficulty of deciding that the people behind a fork of Chrome or Signal are trustworthy. The average person doesn't have the knowledge to do due diligence, and many of us who could (in theory) don't want to bother.
How do you get to the point where people think your team of software developers is legitimate? Decisions like this are based on what everyone else is using.
One reason that app stores serving sandboxed apps are popular is that you don't have to evaluate each software developer's organization just to play their games.