In a move similar to reddit or twitter, Strava is restricting API usage, and other policy changes.
I think an alternative to strava, which is also federated, would be really cool
EDIT: I know you can record teacks and keep them offline and there is plenty of ways to do so. I think the main aspect of Strava is the possibility of sharing the activities with contacts on strava itself.
Like for peertube or pixelfed, the fediverse has the potential to allow any user to share what they like and the other users can see, boost, comment, from their mastodon, pleroma, froendica or wharever accounts. The fact that someone wants to share a track is his own business.
What do you use Strava for? I tried it for a bit until realising it doesn't actually offer anything useful, just publishes your training habits to the world which is kinda creepy
Back when I was using it it was cool to track my progress on different segments of my rides. I could see my progress over time on different sections like a particular hill or whatever. And they also have king of the mountain badges that you can win by being the fastest over certain sections, so it offers a little bit of competition and gamification
The king of the hill part makes sense I guess, fun to see you being on the top :D. for the rest my watch app already does that sorta stuff + coaching and whatnot so not very interesting.
Honestly I kind of assumed other sports trackers would have something similar so you wouldn't need Strava for it
just publishes your training habits to the world which is kinda creepy
You can lock down those settings, so you're able to use the data to benefit your personal training.
I'm part of a club that uses Strava to organize rides, but what Strava is doing will impact every other app that syncs with Strava, and that's just a major PITA.
I see. The Suunto watch/app does all the fancy data stuff for me, so having Strava on top of it is pretty redundant
It also has some social media bullshit on top, but luckily it stays out of the way and iirc all trainings are private by default.
Thinking further though, would be great to see pinetime or other Foss project develop further to provide similar features as Suunto, Garmin and other sports tracking focused devices
You upload your own gpx data from outings to your own hosted instance. its got a specific scope of features, I like it for what it is. Use it for mountain biking. Certainly not a strava alternative without other apps helping.
Openstreet Map has a trip recording feature that has pretty detailed data points. I usually use that for drawing my rides on maps when I remember to turn my location on.
Best option is probably to use something other than the Strava app to record activities and keep backups up the activities locally.
The problem really isn't people looking for an alternative to Strava, it's that so many other apps rely on Strava, so people may need to look for multiple alternatives to other apps, just because of what Strava is doing.
This move guarantees that I'll never pay for Strava. Ever.
Exactly this. As OP I'd wish there was a serious FOSS alternative to it but (1) it seems highly improbable such alternative will have a nice Garmin/Wahoo integration, the latter which I happen to use; (2) niceties like when you share an activity you can choose to put a picture you took on your ride as its background; (3) being able to use it on desktop and mobile, without having to set up a self-hosted instance or something (I don't happen to have a PC working on 24/7 at home!); (4) and maybe this one is just me, but have been using Strava for 11+ years (just checked out, 1007 activities) and I don't know if there is something that lets you export all of your data from it to be used flawlessly with another app.
I deleted my 12 year old account over the latest privacy policy update which auto opted-in to using your data for unspecified AI purposes. There was some discussion here, and while a strava rep did give specific examples in their response, the privacy policy was not updated and continues to be both broad and auto opted-in with no way to opt out.
Regardless of the current use of AI, the broad privacy policy creates the potential to allow them to do many things with your data without telling you about it in the future. And that thread discusses some potential problematic uses that you could be opted into without ever knowing it.
The privacy policy needs to be more specific, and allow opting out (or better yet, make opt out the default).