Mastodon announces transition to non-profit structure | TechCrunch
Mastodon announces transition to non-profit structure | TechCrunch
Decentralized social network organization Mastodon said Monday that it is planning to create a new non-profit organization in Europe and hand overIvan Mehta (TechCrunch)
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TheGrandNagus
in reply to fne8w2ah • • •I'd encourage people to read the article, because it's pretty no-nonsense and has some other interesting details and background information. It's not very long, either!
But here's the important part that the headline speaks of:
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dustyData
in reply to TheGrandNagus • • •like this
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AutoPastry
in reply to dustyData • • •Glasgow
in reply to dustyData • • •like this
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dustyData
in reply to Glasgow • • •It is proprietary, only the Authenticated Transfer protocol is open. Thus far saying it is decentralized is a controversial topic, depends on the definition of dencentralization. A regular user can only hope to host a Personal Data Server, without any real or consequential power over the network, though. Relays are not practical to be hosted by anyone but huge companies. And even then, the content and data is still under absolute power of Bluesky.
For example, if a Mastodon server decides to censor something and you don't agree with said decision, you can change servers and still access the content and participate on the Activity Pub stream. But, if BlueSky decides to censor you or someone else, you are out of luck. Even if you host you own server, the canonical repository of the network activity is under absolute power of BlueSky.
You could host your own AT network, but it is not clear how or even if it will be able to interact with other AT networks or the canonical BlueSky network.
Here's some sources:
gigazine.net/gsc_news/en/20241…
next.ink/158967/bluesky-est-il…
tormentnexus.substack.com/p/is…
Is Bluesky really decentralized? It's complicated
Mathew Ingram (The Torment Nexus)Glasgow
in reply to dustyData • • •Relay only costs a few hundred to run, regular people are already doing this. Also have Jetstream as a lightweight alternative.
Barrier is running your own AppView, but people working on that:
alice.bsky.sh/post/3laega7icmi…
The lack of decentralisation atm is not inherent and reflects the early growth stage. If they started to act like wanks there’d be a greater push to fork and build up parallel instances. Last I checked they were still working on improving the scalability of the protocol before building it out.
How to self-host all of Bluesky except the AppView (for now) — alice.bsky.sh
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Pup Biru
in reply to dustyData • • •imo bsky is not 100% of what we want, but it has roads out of their system… its not decentralised exactly, but you can build bridges and that’s super important
the main reason people stay with facebook, twitter, reddit, etc is what’s called the “network effect”. for social media, it’s hyper important to get people onto the platform, otherwise it’s not social (reddit and lemmy a bit different: you still need a self-sustaining amount of people, but the more you get to the “people you know” platforms, the more you need as close to everyone you can get to keep people there)
now, twitter, facebook, instagram, etc have no functionality to allow people off-platform to contact people on-platform (and visa versa), so if you leave the platform you loose all those connections - the first people to move have a terrible experience because the platform is pretty much useless (there’s no social in the social media)
bsky at least changes that part so now we can bridge: bsky users can interact with mastodon users, which means that in the future it’ll be much easier for people to make the choice to leave, if they choose to: they don’t have to give up the creators they follow, or family and friends… there might be a slightly degraded experience, but i’d argue that’s pretty negligible
heck, i’d even prefer to trade twitter for threads at this point: imo facebook as a whole company is worse that twitter, but threads at least allows that off-ramp
if facebook itself were federated, who knows maybe one of these days i could convince my parents to move to friendica
Bridgy Fed
fed.brid.gyabeorch
in reply to TheGrandNagus • •@TheGrandNagus
@fne8w2ah @Technology
The important thing here is this avoids what happened with (and sorry i have to mention this ) #wordpress where one guy personally ran the org that guided the development of the software and then created dependencies on a central site he personally owns to control updates and access to plugins
Ownership of #trademark terms are important and open structures for things like.joinmastodon.org is as well
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Curious Canid
in reply to fne8w2ah • • •veee
in reply to fne8w2ah • • •The steps taken linking Mastodon > Fediverse > Wordpress > Matt Mullenweg makes sense and is the kind of publicity/damage control the platform needs to get ahead of.
The WordPress vs. WP Engine drama, explained | TechCrunch
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essteeyou
Unknown parent • • •Telorand
Unknown parent • • •I know you meant it in jest, but I think the last I saw, it was at 9mil and growing steadily.
And TBH, that relative lack of general attention is probably a good thing. Too much growth too fast could swamp or sink some instances.
Telorand
Unknown parent • • •Have you tried doing things like following hashtags? That's the best way to find content, I've found. If you write your own comments, you should also use hashtags so people can find you.
None of that will happen by default, and there's no algorithm that will do that for you.
RxBrad
Unknown parent • • •RxBrad
Unknown parent • • •Yep. The "big frickin' nerd" part carries my statement pretty hard.
Homelab, videogames, Linux stuff... Content for miles.
Ulrich
in reply to RxBrad • • •I follow lots of cool stuff but also notice that none of that cool stuff gets any sort of interaction whatsoever. That's because discoverability is shit. Search is broken. The only thing that gets any sort of attention is TRUSK BAD.
BSky has the right idea with user-configurable/sharable algorithms. So there are still algorithms, but you the user are entirely in control of them.
r4venw
Unknown parent • • •affiliate
in reply to fne8w2ah • • •could this be cause for concern down the line? i mean this as a genuine question. i don’t really know how these things work. my understanding is some weird non-profit and profit mixture is what led to problems at openAI. but that said, i also know that the people at the company make a difference, and sam altman is very likely much worse than the mastodon CEO. anyways, it would be nice to know more about this relationship between the profit and non profit side of things.
hcbxzz
in reply to affiliate • • •NigelFrobisher
in reply to fne8w2ah • • •RxBrad
in reply to Ulrich • • •Oh, I hear you...
Filters can make it so the Mastodon feed doesn't force you to want to walk out into traffic.
Ulrich
in reply to RxBrad • • •