The developer behind Pixelfed, Loops, and Sup, open source alternatives to Instagram, TikTok, and WhatsApp, respectively, is now raising funds on Kickstarter to fuel the apps’ further development.

The trio is part of the growing open social web, also known as the fediverse, powered by the same ActivityPub protocol used by X alternative Mastodon. The latter saw increased signups and use after the company formerly known as Twitter sold to Elon Musk in October 2022 and during the X exodus that followed the U.S. presidential election.

In the months and years following that sale, open source and decentralized apps like Mastodon and Bluesky (which uses the newer AT Protocol), have continued to grow their user bases, as people sought alternatives to centralized social media apps controlled by billionaires like Musk and Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg.

MBFC
Archive

Edit: Link to the kickstarter

  • Oozy
    link
    English
    571 day ago

    WhatsApp? Just use signal already!

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      912 hours ago

      It’s not really a whatsapp alternative. More like a facebook messenger alternative. It replaces and encrypts dms from mastodon, pixelfed, lemmy, etc

    • @warmaster
      link
      English
      10
      edit-2
      15 hours ago

      Centralized. Not good. Conversations is on fdroid and is decentralized, federated, open source and uses a mature and battle tested protocol (XMPP). If I wanted something new, I would prefer Matrix over Signal.

        • @warmaster
          link
          English
          28 hours ago

          Sure, it looks great. But it doesn’t have the popularity of Matrix, which is already less popular than XMPP which has enjoyed decent adoption since it’s inception.

      • astro_ray
        link
        fedilink
        English
        514 hours ago

        Why are there so many downvotes? Dude said the truth. Signal, like whatsapp, is a single point of failure. It can be enshittified just like whatsapp.

          • astro_ray
            link
            fedilink
            English
            511 hours ago

            With so many examples like twitter, reddit, Factbook, whatsapp, instagram etc. can you really blame us for not liking centralized services? Also, I don’t hate all centralized services. I love Wikipedia, Openstreetmap.org etc. Also, the outage of OSM earlier proves that single point of failure is a reason for concern.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              English
              310 hours ago

              I don’t like centralized services. I also never pretended the opposite.

              This is for me and my usage. The caveat is that not everyone is in the tech. We can look at the disastrous communication of Mastodon. They focussed and lots of people promoting it focussed too on the “decentralized argument”. This backfired. It was not clear for the public. A good strategy would have been to market Mastodon as an alternative with an easy process to create an account on the general website. Tech people would have chosen another server and do their stuffs. People would learn progressively the decentralization part and move from server to server. This takes time. We have to put great strategies in places and be patient to bring the public to the fedi.

              • astro_ray
                link
                fedilink
                English
                14 hours ago

                I don’t know if you know about it, but there’s this new community [email protected] They got some nice discussion about how to on-board more people on here.

      • @Deway
        link
        English
        1018 hours ago

        People act like we need an alternative to Whatsapp but XMPP/Jabber exists and is much older.

          • @Deway
            link
            English
            49 hours ago

            Pidgin is a client, not a specific protocol.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              English
              28 hours ago

              I know, I just remember I used to use it with jabber xmpp but I think after everyone got gtalk and then everyone got cellphones everyone moved away from those types of clients

              • @Deway
                link
                English
                18 hours ago

                Fun fact, Google Talk and Facebook used to be compatible with XMPP.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          016 hours ago

          Nobody but a handful of nerds uses it though. You won’t get your grandparents and less tech literate friends to leave whatsapp in droves, simple as that.

          • @Deway
            link
            English
            39 hours ago

            And they’re not going to leave WhatsApp for Sup? either. All I’m saying is we’ve had an alternative for decades, even before WA was created, we don’t need another one, we need the one we already have to have more success.

      • Lurker
        link
        fedilink
        English
        81 day ago

        Matrix? Just use telepathy already! /s

        I prefer Matrix over Signal because it required personal numbers.

        • @renzev
          link
          English
          518 hours ago

          I tried using it with a friend, and it completely nuked my phone’s battery, while my friend’s phone silently killed it (likely for using too much battery). I understand that truly privacy-respecting messengers will always use slightly more power than apps that use the google notification thing, but simplex is just a complete power hog beyond any reasonable limit. Hopefully they fix it at some point, it seems like a pretty solid messenger otherwise, and their approach to privacy and anonymity is unparalleled, at least in theory.

      • @dilroopgill
        link
        English
        11 day ago

        you go on matrix and some of the communities are like no matrex bad goto simplex we’re there now

      • ExFed
        link
        fedilink
        English
        917 hours ago

        Not open source

        There are lots of good reasons to be upset with how Signal produces builds. And maybe Signal has no good reason why they keep opaque dependencies. But by every common definition of the term, Signal is open source. Being on FDroid is not the definition of open source.

        Please don’t gatekeep. There are better ways to criticize Signal. This is not one of them.

          • ExFed
            link
            fedilink
            English
            2
            edit-2
            14 hours ago

            Following that logic:

            Many popular Linux distros contain closed source blobs. Ergo Linux is closed source.

            • astro_ray
              link
              fedilink
              English
              514 hours ago

              Then that particular build of the distro is closed source. The linux kernel is still open source.

              • ExFed
                link
                fedilink
                English
                014 hours ago

                Okay, so the Apache license is a “closed source” license?

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              English
              0
              edit-2
              13 hours ago

              Linux is an open source kernel. Many operating systems that use linux ars closed source, yes. This is the position of the FSF.

              And its why most Linux distros have an option to include closed source or not.

              Signal, however, has no option. Its just closed source software.

              • ExFed
                link
                fedilink
                English
                014 hours ago

                Sure. That’s one possible vector. Is it “Open Source” software? Yes, they accept contributions for the community. It’s is “Libre” software? No, they depend on closed source software.

                I’m trying to illustrate that the definition of “open source” can be weaponized for no good reason. Dismissing Signal because it doesn’t fit a narrow definition of “open source” makes everybody less secure. I have a hard enough time convincing my non-tech-savvy friends to switch to Signal. There’s a snowball’s chance in Hell I’ll convince them to use something even more obscure.

                • DBosiers
                  link
                  fedilink
                  112 hours ago

                  @ExFed Lol, I messaged 20+ connections to step over…nobody. We have a saying “what the farmer doesn’t know, the farmer doesn’t like” I fear signal has to be mentioned a thousand times from all directions before they “trust” it. The publics trust is based on repetition and the concept that a big firm has more to lose than an non profit.

                  • ExFed
                    link
                    fedilink
                    English
                    110 hours ago

                    I fear signal has to be mentioned a thousand times from all directions before they “trust” it.

                    Yes. A thousand times yes. The risk profiles humans naturally adapted to are not well aligned with the artificial risk profiles we see today. I can’t fault someone for not transcending their own natural instincts, because heaven knows I can’t.