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🇨🇦Samuel Proulx🇨🇦 @fastfinge@interfree.ca
1y
So as I went for a walk this morning, I was musing on my switch to Kagi, and hosting my own bookmark manager, and Mastodon, and so-on. One of the key things that make these services better, I think, is that they rely on intentional user signals. Three quarters of the websites I visit are totally unimportant. Most of the YouTube videos I view turned out to be neutral to bad, and I don't want to keep seeing more of them. Half the products I look at I have no intention of purchasing. But big tech slurps up all this low quality data and throws it into a big data soup. However: garbage in, garbage out, right? I think hyper-personalization isn't the exclusive domain of big tech. In fact, without big data, I think we can do it better. Because we're relying on explicit decisions that users made, with the intention of effecting their experience. So it's less data, but the quality is a hundred times higher. For example, I would love a fediverse client that can determine the posts that are most similar to posts I previously boosted, and let me choose to sort those to the top. I follow a few hundred active posters, and there's no way I can keep up with all of you. I know I'm missing super cool stuff. But to surface the cool stuff, we don't need big tech and data from millions of users. We just need to make better use of the personal data we already have about ourselves.
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🇨🇦Samuel Proulx🇨🇦 @fastfinge@interfree.ca
1y
Maybe the catchy way to sum that up is: "Big tech wants us to be more like everyone else. We need to create tech that helps us be more like ourselves." I'd like to see apps that better use and surface my own private data to help me discover myself.
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🇨🇦Samuel Proulx🇨🇦 @fastfinge@interfree.ca
1y
I'd love Firefox to surface stuff from my browser history from four years ago that I never visit anymore. If I thought it was cool back then, maybe reminding me of it could be useful. Doesn't even require anything to leave my device to do easy, neat stuff like that.
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Fluchtkapsel (NaNd verbleiben) @fluchtkapsel@nerdculture.de
1y
@fastfinge That's a neat idea. Browser-integrated reaction buttons or like buttons. And based on that some Facebook or Google Photos like "on this day n years ago".

Another way would be to make some ActivityPub powered service where users push their reactions to sites, pages, URLs, whatever. Instead of a web client this should sit in the browser as some kind of WebExtension if not fully integrated. No discussions, only reactions. This shouldn't be some kind of Reddit or Lemmy clone.
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