Is anyone making a TikTok or Snapchat style #Fediverse instance platform?
Now @Raspberry_Pi has its own @Mastodon instance, and because we’re committed to supporting platforms that support us, we’re putting our money where our mouth is. We have become a platinum sponsor of #Mastodon. In case you don't know Mastodon is a non-profit corporation based in Germany supported by both its sponsors and patreons. #TwitterMigration https://joinmastodon.org/sponsors
Whoa whoa whoa...
Whoa.
You mean to tell me that #Mastodon has *zero* algorithms deciding what I should read, and that the vast majority of instances banish Nazis into their own shadowrealm instead of tolerating them in the name of EnGaGeMenT?
Hah! Next you'll tell me there are no advertisers wielding influence over feature design so they get more marketing eyeballs!
Wait, what??!
The biggest mistake web devs ever made was focusing on corporate-owned APIs instead of on new and innovative open protocols.
I don't care how all-encompassing Big Social become -- or whether Google or Apple can keep their market valuations ongoing.
Those "critical" APIs can be yoinked at any moment.
However, SMTP and HTTP have now been used for decades. So why not build on the next generation of open protocols?
When it came time to reckon with social media’s failings, nobody ran to the “web3” platforms. Nobody asked “can I get paid per message”? Nobody asked about the blockchain. The community of people who’ve been quietly doing this work for years (decades!) ended up being the ones who welcomed everyone over, as always.
I'm really not worried about Mastodon scaling issues at all.
When I left Twitter in 2008, we had roughly twice as many users as the current combined Mastodon network, all running on one MySQL server that had the same specs as a high-end 2013 MacBook Pro, plus roughly 10 web servers and 5 queue servers.
To be fair, growth wasn't as rapid, and we had local-infra advantages over federated systems, but these problems are solvable and I have no doubt will be fixed soon.
*Hugops to all admins!*
@mikebaz Welcome to the Fediverse! 🍍
#Introductions I’ve started learning lots about #FOSS and #Linux a few years ago and I love it even as an ex #Microsoft #MVP.
My day job is in #Web #Design, #GraphicDesign, and #EnvironmentalDesign, while I also do some work in #UXDesign, as well as part-time #TechJournalism at #Pocketnow.
Another part-time job is #Photography where I often shoot #Fashion shows, #CommercialModels, #Models, #Events, and #Weddings.
In 2017 I wrote a Wired column about "antiviral design" in social media ...
... or, niche/small blogging/posting sites that were designed to *inhibit* viral waves of attention: https://www.wired.com/story/this-stripped-down-blogging-tool-exemplifies-antisocial-media/
The opposite of how Twitter works
I wasn't yet back then aware of Mastodon!
But the more I've used it, the more I've noticed that Mastodon has similarly antiviral properties
It isn't designed to foster massive joint attention on viral posts
This unsettles a certain class of Twitter émigré
For those who want to set up your own instance - this is a good link - https://stuxhost.com/knowledgebase/14/Easy-Mastodon-social-media-setup-with-Yunohost.html - but you install Debian and then yunohost and then let it install mastodon - the nice thing is that it tells you all the DNS params you need. Very turn key. Probably took me about an hour to do it (well, you still have to deal with DNS propagation)
I see a lot of people talking about how Mastodon "Feels like the Internet I remember from 20 years ago."
That's no accident. That's Federation. That's UseNet, IRC, Email, Message Boards, etc. What do they all have in common?
Federation: Users congregating around watering holes of common interest, but still being a part of a larger whole.
THIS IS HOW THE INTERNET WAS DESIGNED TO BE. And I am HERE for it.
Designer & web developer since the mid 1990's starting on the DEC intranet. User experience consultant since 1998. Photographer since 1995. Tech journalist since 2002.
DMs don't work, so don't bother.