Hm I just had this thought:
It seems to me that people who use Mastodon complain a lot about the bad people on the fediverse, like the racists, nazis, whatever. And I dont fucking see these bad people....
So I wonder maybe is because I use Friendica which displays posts and I have complete control over what I see. For example I can easily select to see ONLY the posts from my friends. Period. But Mastodon people may not have these sort of options, PLUS on Mastodon you see comments instead of posts. Like a fuck ton of comments.
So what if because Mastodon people get to read a lot of comments instead of posts, they see a lot more of the crap!?
I wonder...
And for the love of words, I have no clue how people put up with a newsfeed made up of comments that are always out of context. Makes a lot more sense to see posts and then comments on those posts, but never comments in the wild.
Maybe Mastodon people should try Friendica. It is really awesome and the control you have over what you see and who can interact with you, is amazing.
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Tio
Unknown parent • •Isaac Kuo
in reply to Tio • • •You run your own pod, right? I think the main factor is simply that most people are on pods with a lot of people, and a pod will pull in posts/comments from anyone that is followed by at least one person on the pod.
If no one on your pod follows racists/nazis/whatever then you won't see their comments. If they do, though, then you'll have to curate your experience by blocking/ignoring them individually. Which is an absolute pain.
That's how it works on the ActivityPub side of things.
On the diaspora side of things, it's a bit different. Diaspora uses a posts+comments paradigm, where the "owner" of a comment thread is the person who posted the post. They can moderate the comments, blocking bad actors and/or deleting individual comments.
So, as long as everyone you follow moderates their own posts, you don't have to do anything other than moderate your own posts (in kind). So fundamentally, it's easier to curate your experience in Diaspora than Mastadon.
With Friendica and other platforms which federate with both ActivityPub and Diaspora, it's more comp
... show moreYou run your own pod, right? I think the main factor is simply that most people are on pods with a lot of people, and a pod will pull in posts/comments from anyone that is followed by at least one person on the pod.
If no one on your pod follows racists/nazis/whatever then you won't see their comments. If they do, though, then you'll have to curate your experience by blocking/ignoring them individually. Which is an absolute pain.
That's how it works on the ActivityPub side of things.
On the diaspora side of things, it's a bit different. Diaspora uses a posts+comments paradigm, where the "owner" of a comment thread is the person who posted the post. They can moderate the comments, blocking bad actors and/or deleting individual comments.
So, as long as everyone you follow moderates their own posts, you don't have to do anything other than moderate your own posts (in kind). So fundamentally, it's easier to curate your experience in Diaspora than Mastadon.
With Friendica and other platforms which federate with both ActivityPub and Diaspora, it's more complex. Posts/comments on the Diaspora side work like Diaspora. Posts/comments on the ActivityPub side work like Mastodon. This can be particularly confusing for new users.
Tio
in reply to Isaac Kuo • •Isaac Kuo
in reply to Tio • • •@Tio You don't see any comments at all, then? It has been a while since I tried Friendica, but I thought it would show at least some comments without needing to click through or expand.
Ugh.
The lack of visibility of comments kills interaction, and makes it such a slog for me to browse a stream. It takes so much time and effort to click and expand all of the comments, and even more so if a click through is required. This is why I keep going back to Diaspora.
Tio
in reply to Isaac Kuo • •Isaac Kuo
in reply to Tio • • •Thanks, that's what I had experienced back when I tried Friendica.
Like it or not, you will see any comments from (Mastodon) posters who are followed by at least one user on your pod. The way Mastodon/ActivityPub works, each comment is "owned" by the commenter. The person who made the post it's replying to does not have an option to delete the comment.
Tio
in reply to Isaac Kuo • •Yes I can see the comments but not as posts, that's what I was saying. I can see the posts made by my friends, and yeah if I wanna read the comments I can do that too but they are not polluting since they are a few (collapsed). So I cannot see these "bad people" honestly...
And if I do in the comments I can easily block them and I will never see their comments again.
The control is fabulous.
Isaac Kuo
in reply to Tio • • •I'm saying that the reason you don't see the "bad people" is that you run your own pod with few users, so no one else on your pod is following them. You only see a comment if at least one person on your pod follows the person making the comment.
A Mastodon user doesn't even see those comments at all unless they click through to view a post/reply thread. Even then, the way Mastodon works is that you only see part of the thread ... it's really stupid. But anyway, you either don't see any comments at all, or you click through and you see comments that the original poster has no moderation control over.
My point is - the problem is the protocol, and the choices of other people on your pod. Trying out Friendica wouldn't help.
Tio
in reply to Isaac Kuo • •Isaac Kuo
in reply to Tio • • •Ah, thanks for the correction.
Anyway, I don't see the relevance of whether or not you follow hundreds of people from different instances, or the numbers of comments in threads.
I don't think you understand how things work on Mastodon, though. By default, you only see posts/comments by people you directly follow, and you simply do not see ANY comments by anyone you don't directly follow. You have to click through to see any comments made by anyone else, and even then it's only comments made by people who are followed by at least one person on your pod.
Like I said, trying Friendica wouldn't help.
Tio
in reply to Isaac Kuo • •Isaac Kuo
in reply to Tio • • •BTW, a thousand users is not very much compared to popular Mastodon pods. For example, I'm on mastodonDOTsocial, which has 1.5 million users. Most of these users are not active though, only 280,000 users active last month.
But a thousand active users should be enough to have at least a few following "bad people". Are all of those users active?
Isaac Kuo
in reply to Tio • • •Huh. According to this, less than a thousand users, and only 48 active:
fedidb.org/network/instance/so…
That's ... not very much, honestly.
FediDB - Fediverse Network Statistics
fedidb.orgTio
in reply to Isaac Kuo • •Isaac Kuo
in reply to Tio • • •Tio
in reply to Isaac Kuo • •