From their About page:
Project Liberty is stitching together an ecosystem of technologists, academics, policymakers and citizens committed to building a people-powered internet—where the data is ours to manage, the platforms are ours to govern, and the power is ours to reclaim.
I just heard Frank McCourt on a podcast plugging his book “Our Biggest Fight”.
It was great to hear someone with a voice talking about the problems we see with user data and social media, especially the problem of the Social Graph (the map of all your social connections, which includes weights and values).
Their solution to this problem was to develop a social networking protocol that enables any compliant app to use (think how email works - a standard protocol, SMTP), but encrypted and user data controlled by the user. They call it DSNP - Decentralized Social Networking Protocol.
I see both sides of their approach, I’m kind of ambivalent, lots of concern here long-term.
They’ve already acquired MeWe and have converted some users to this protocol. He wants to buy the US side of TikTok (if it becomes available) and convert it to DSNP, which would encrypt about 30 million US accounts.
I’m always cynical about stuff that sounds promising, but I don’t have the tech background to really dissect what they’re doing. Anyone understand this better?
At first glance this seems to be some bullshit by oligarch Frank McCourt. Billionaires won’t save us, or did we learn nothing from Elon Musk? Musk and McCourt are transnational billionaires and constituent parts of the US military-intelligence-propaganda-industrial complex.
I mean, McCourt has his own school at Georgetown U.: https://mccourt.georgetown.edu/
Georgetown U., situated literally in the middle of D.C., is a major center for training new generations of US domestic & imperial functionaries.
Can confirm. I consulted there a few times.
Oh, and the kids of very wealthy people.
I don’t disagree
Folks have not learned anything.
I just had a thought: How long do you think it’ll take for oligarchs to start using current online sentiment manipulation techniques to get people away from distributed, non-profit media back onto the latest incarnation of traditional services?
Definitely a big concern