Before you start throwing 💩 , hear me out…

I’m a huge fan of the fediverse…it’s returning to the original design of the Internet…where everyone can communicate freely and openly and corporations have a very difficult time pulling anything creepy that LinkedIn/Twitter (yes, I’ll still call it Twitter)/Facebook does.

But I sense a huge frustration with businesses that want to network with others but feel their hands are tied by these walled gardens.

I figure, why not make the fediverse business friendly?

Right now most people on Mastodon/Lemmy/etc. seem to be more of the anarchist/weekend hacker types. So part of my concern with this is that it would taint the fediverse with a bunch of spam. But by the same token it would also help grow the job market and provide opportunities for people that they may not have had on LinkedIn. Of course, I’d stress for anyone on the site to operate in a community-first mindset.

So, some question…

  1. Would this type of instance be met with disgust? I mean, obviously the great thing about the fediverse is that you can block servers you don’t want on the network, but having the instance blocked would kind of defeat the purpose. 😅

  2. If you’re excited by the idea, what things would you like to see? In my own armchair brainstorming, I thought joint accounts would be a good idea, as well as analytics.

  3. Suggestion for already-existing platform? Can’t find a good one that would be ready-to-go to build off of. There’s friendica, but I’m not much of a fan of PHP, and it seems to not have great adoption, either.

  • Admiral Patrick@dubvee.org
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    10 months ago

    Why would I pay for something I don’t even want to use for free?

    I really don’t feel that the Fediverse needs to be business friendly. They tend to ruin everything they touch.

  • Björn Tantau@swg-empire.de
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    10 months ago

    I don’t quite see how paid and federated go together. Would only the users on that platform have to pay while others would be able to access it from their free instances?

    • Steve@communick.news
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      10 months ago

      Yes exactly.

      You can pay to fund the instance you use. To help ensure it’s worth the time of whoever is managing it.

      It’s how Communick works. Or is hoped to work. It seems difficult to convince fedizins to pay for this great stuff.

      • PlanetOfOrd@lemmy.worldOP
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        10 months ago

        Yeah, that’s what I was hoping for. I’m a believer that money = value. If something or someone is valuable, it should be paid for and there’s nothing wrong with that.

        I’m also a believer that you can operate in FOSS/Fedi-mode and still make money.

    • Admiral Patrick@dubvee.org
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      10 months ago

      I mean, they could operate on an allow list model, and your instance domain is federated with them as long as your subscription is active (ofc it’d be a subscription because it’s 2024 and everything is awful).

    • PlanetOfOrd@lemmy.worldOP
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      10 months ago

      Yup, an instance would be paid, but if someone wanted to launch a service of their own they totally could…they just won’t have the upstream features and the primary support from the paid instance.

  • sabreW4K3@lemmy.tf
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    10 months ago

    If you peruse the fediblock hashtag on mastodon, you’ll see that most corporations are blocked expeditiously. The vibe of the Fediverse isn’t into placating corporations or having non people in people’s personal spaces.

    You’re free to make an instance, but know that whether it’s Frendica, Lemmy, PixelFed or even mastodon, you’re not likely to get much traction.

  • Paragone@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    I see an alignment-problem:

    IF it is paid by the job-seekers, who may be destitute, THEN the rich job-seekers distort the market in their favor.

    ELSIF it is paid by the job-posters, who definitely intend to underpay all whom they hire, then it has motivation to help misrepresent things.

    Enshittification is inevitable, either-way.

    I hold that the Fediverse NEEDS a LinkedIn replacement, the problem is that a healthy such replacement is in the Public interest, & therefore the Public ought be paying for it.

    Which will never happen, in the lobbied-puppets “electorate” world.

    It isn’t even a political question, left or right, it is a market-integrity question.

    The greater the integrity of the employment-market, the stronger the country, obviously.

    Therefore removing the job-board/job-market from ALL special-interest-groups/torquers/machiavellians can significantly benefit the country(ies) who impliment correctly, in the long-term/strategic scope.

    _ /\ _

    • PlanetOfOrd@lemmy.worldOP
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      10 months ago

      Job-seeker/employer is only a drop in the ocean of what professional networking (and LinkedIn) is about. It’s a community of businesses that all help each other collaborate and build…a way to share ideas and make new connections…at least, I think that’s what everyone wants it to be.

  • Dr. Wesker@lemmy.sdf.org
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    10 months ago

    LinkedIn is a burning dumpster fire, where the dumpster is intentionally designed to be anti-user, and the fire is kindled by narcissists and predators.

  • Scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech
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    10 months ago

    I’m honestly looking at your idea, and really I am.

    I think you’re trying to solve spam by making it a paid service, but paid and walled gardens go directly against the fediverse, whose protocol can be read and submitted to by anyone. So it’s either a paid walled garden, in which case it’s LinkedIn, or it’s open.

    Instead, I’d say that you’re going for a verification system, to say I am this person and I am willing to prove it is. I think this could be done, and your platform would only care about others who are verified. Spammers aren’t willing to prove who they are, and for most of the fediverse I could see them going against something like a verification system. However on a platform like linked in that’s different, you could have a verification system and it’d be to its benefit.

    My 2 cents at least

    • PlanetOfOrd@lemmy.worldOP
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      10 months ago

      Nope, no verification system…complete opposite…you’d just need to pay an I don’t care who you are (I’d even take crypto like Monero). I think being on week 4 of wrestling with LinkedIn’s verification system (being in LI jail for the 3rd time!) has made me sick of it.

      One thing I like about the fediverse is it’s very community-driven. If I come across a spam message on Mastodon, I’ll start to report it to the community but find 10 others who are saying the same thing and within 5 minutes the dude is out. Meanwhile LinkedIn has a draconian verification system that treats its users like toddlers, while every other week I have someone asking to take over my UpWork account (and LI doesn’t ban them).

      • Scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech
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        10 months ago

        Oh, then no. As someone who heavily uses LinkedIn for my professional life and the fediverse for my personal, I would not use it. Fediverse is great for my personal life, LinkedIn is free and already used abundently. It’s how I’ve gotten my last several jobs. I would see no benefit in paying for a smaller less used service.

        I think most people would agree with me, why pay for something that would have less recruiters and less benefit than using LinkedIn. LinkedIn is a sell out’s game, sure, but I’m not exactly going there because I want to give out crunchy granola vibes either.

        • PlanetOfOrd@lemmy.worldOP
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          10 months ago

          Ah, I see. Yeah, I keep forgetting that a lot of people use LinkedIn for job-searching (I mean, I kinda do too, but been active on it like 7 years without a single follow-through). I see it as a networking tool. Job-searching may be part of it, but business leaders and ultra wealthy use it to make connections and support each other (theoretically). Businesses/creators would be the target market. Maybe some job-search aspect to it at some point.

  • haui@lemmy.giftedmc.com
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    10 months ago

    This is a wild comment section.

    Thanks for coming up with the idea. I‘ve thought about this a couple of times but that was it so far.

    I think only people who have actually used linkedin for an extended amount of time will get its up and downsides (and no, I‘m not a fan).

    To approach this problem bottom up, I ask myself, what is linkedin?

    Job-site for some, facebook for business contacts for most I guess. So something like friendica comes to mind so the general user can switch easily while mastodon and lemmy dont fit the bill in my opinion. Making a whole new thing (using AP) would be possible but I‘m not sure its such a great idea. Companies dont care if its a different app, they care about marketing which can be done by changing the frontend.

    Disclaimer

    As someone with a wide variety of jobs on their cv I have also been an employer, both employed in HR exec and an entrepreneur for nearly 20 yrs. i have paid for job ads and have hired people at higher wages as the competition because even back then I didnt care how low I can go but how people earn a living.

    Payment

    In opposition to popular belief, small companies happily(?) pay for job ads if that is the cost of doing business. If its legal work and not lazy searching for victims, paying a small amount (100-500 €$ depending on the outcome) is no problem imo. Maybe it should depend on the revenue the company posts on their profile btw. Also in my experience, people seem to think corpos are the best way to make money. Short term that may be correct but it is a stupid idea. I made a living with my company to limit business to a maximum of 10% to one customer (also businesses). That way no corporation could threaten to ruin me. The same should go here. I would not give higher power to those able to pay more. Make fair, transparent prices that pay for hardware, software, electricity and work, not a ferrari. The idea of getting rich is toxic and against the nature of the fediverse imo.

    Federation

    Other fediverse services will defederate the instance as they do with each other as well but thats a risk I would take. The important question imo is why?. I defederate because the spam, hate of an instance outweighs its benefits. So one goal would be to keep as many as possible from defederating. So a non-violent approach would be great. The instance cant accept bigotry, corporate lies (big factor), migoynism, ableism, etc. Europe is kind of progressive in job legislature which is how I‘d do it since companies would miss out a lot of viewers otherwise.

    The idea

    I would probably go forth with some pretty idealistic goals and unique proposals. Something like give visibility to small companies, to ethically trying companies, maybe design some kind of code of conduct for fediverse-acceptable-companies or something. The range of ideas is wide imo.

    Privacy

    The worst part of this imo is the fact that people are with their personal info on linkedin. I dont know if they have scrape prevention measures but the amount of personal data you can get from there seems scary. The risk doing this in the fedi seems high. I‘d probably try to transition to nicknames like the rest does. People can post personal info which is anonymited in the open and once the company and person have made contact and the person says ok, that one company can view their job info.

    Summary

    So after writing this, I think its worth trying. Lemmy and mastodon are very much places to discuss stuff but obviously, lemmy is very critical of this and I get that. Mastodon will probably be more open but less technically adept imo. Good luck and lmk if you need help. I‘m experienced in process design, am an admin and know some code.

  • jol@discuss.tchncs.de
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    10 months ago

    I’ve been thinking about creating a federated LinkedIn but still haven’t totally nailed the concept, as it goes far beyond just posting content. But no, I doubt you could convince anyone to pay for it.

    My main frustration right now is that with the downfall of twitter, LinkedIn became the defacto business contact that people exchange at conferences and meetups. What I’d love to have is an alternative to that for starters.

    If you’re serious about that, I would love to have a chat.

  • Mars2k21@kbin.social
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    10 months ago

    I don’t personally use Linkedin so I can’t really comment on how a federated alternative would work or be useful for professionals and networking.

    What I will say is that paid/business-related and the general fediverse culture/design seems like oil and water. Especially the paid part. It simply won’t take off unless there is a mass exodus of people from Linkedin (very unlikely). And even then, having multiple instances for something as focused on Linkedin doesn’t seem viable. It’s probably better off centralized and disconnected from a large network like the Fediverse, in my opinion.

    The closest the fediverse can get to this is professionals using Mastodon or something in the same way they used Twitter before it imploded. Interesting idea though.

  • Handles@leminal.space
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    10 months ago

    Of all the social networks out there, I think there is a reason that nobody else has tried to replicate LinkedIn in the Fediverse yet. It’s just not a very attractive idea in the first place.

    The only value I see in that pkatform is as a professional network where users can present their work profile separately from, I dunno, their interesting life stuff? I’m not sure because I haven’t used LinkedIn since Microsoft bought it. Even then it was the kind of tedious who-works-where-now oneupmanship that got old real quick.

    I don’t see actual platforms in that vein working in the Fediverse where people can just make alt accounts — on special interest instances that cater to their specific line of work, if such exist. The corporate soul crunching of potential employers monitoring your LinkedIn account for signs of unemployability is just not something you want to carry over anywhere.