Skip to main content


Why is Mastodon struggling to survive?


I don't like the clickbait title at all -- Mastodon's clearly going to survive, at least for the forseeable future, and it wouldn't surprise me if it outlives Xitter.

Still, Mastodon is struggling; most of the people who checkd it out in the November 2022 surge (or the smaller June 2023 surge) didn't stick around, and numbers have been steadily declining for the last year. The author makes some good points, and some of the comments are excellent.

https://www.reddit.com/r/Mastodon/comments/1g1g844/why_is_mastodon_struggling_to_survive/

in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

Mastodon has a larger percentage of the fediverse audience than any other agent, so not sure how you can equate that to struggling to survive. It is somewhat polluted with former Twatter left wing retards but that is just because it's resemblance to Twatter lead to it's adoption by a lot of former twatter twits when Musk took Twatter over.
in reply to Nanook

Fwiw, a lot of people here call it Xhitter. Bc it sounds like Shitter, which is what the site has become (I wouldn't know personally, I didn't have an account there even before the Musk took it over:-).
in reply to OpenStars

@OpenStars I would argue that it hasn't become that, it was that well before Musks takeover.
in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

Because Threads and BlueSky form effective competition with Twitter.

Also, short form content with just a few sentences per post sucks. It's become obvious. That Twitter was mostly algorithm hype and FOMO.

Mastodon tries to be healthier but I'm not convinced that microblogs in general are that useful, especially to a techie audience who knows RSS and other publishing formats.

This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to dragontamer

@dragontamer @The Nexus of Privacy

"short form content with just a few sentences per post sucks"

I agree and that's why the first site I put up was friendica, but I find on friendica, even though people have the space to express their thoughts in depth and eloquently, few do so, so perhaps Mastodon is so successful because it appeals to people who are incapable of effective self expression. At any rate, it is a reality that it is, so I do run one of those also.

in reply to dragontamer

Bluesky certainly provides another option ... when Apartheid Clyde led to Twitter getting shut down in Brazil, there was a small bump in Mastodon's numbers, but a much bigger influx to Bluesky. Then again Bluesky's addressed a lot of problems people coming to Mastodon in 2022 had, and Mastodon hasn't, so if everybody had come to Mastodon instead the pattern would likely have repeated itself and most of them wouldn't have stuck around.
in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

What are some of the issues you'd like to see addressed? I don't use mastodon as much so I'm not familiar with what has / hasn't been done.

ex. I hear they've been working on content discovery, such as with the recommended accounts carousel

in reply to Otter

erinkissane.com/mastodon-is-ea… is a good overview (not by me!) of issues that the November 2022 wave ran into. What's frustrating is that so many of these are very similar to the issues the April 2017 wave ran into!

Release 4.3 did some work on the recommended accounts, that's good, but the problems start even before that. What instance to sign up to? Most people have better experiences on smaller instances that match either their interests or their geography ... but how to find them? mastodon.social is (for most people) kind of meh -- certainly not the worst, but it's not all that well-moderated, and it's big enough that the local feed isn't useful for finding interesting people or stuff -- and that's now the default. Also it took over a year to get 4.3 out; I get it, they're a small team, some stuff turned out to be a lot harder than expected, and they had to deal with a bunch of security patches in the interim ... still, that means progress is frustratingly slow.

in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

The fact that like an rethreads are not federated is I pretty big issue. Like if you come from a small instance, you'll see most global posts at 0 likes, which makes the platform look dead.
in reply to dragontamer

in reply to ArchRecord

Non-file based computing is a highly unexplored design space.


No it isn't; that's what databases are.

in reply to grue

@grue @ArchRecord An example of a database that doesn't keep it's data in files?
in reply to Nanook

I'm not a big expert on database technology, but I am aware of there being at least a few database systems ("In-Memory") that use the RAM of the computer for transient storage, and since RAM doesn't use files as a concept in the same way, the data stored there isn't exactly inside a "file," so to speak.

That said, they are absolutely dwarfed by the majority of databases, which use some kind of file as a means to store the database, or the contents within it.

Obviously, that's not to say using files is bad in any way, but the possibilities for how database software could have developed, had we not used files as a core computing concept during their inception, are now closed off. We simply don't know what databases could have looked like, because of "lock-in."

in reply to ArchRecord

Memory is still structured like a file and referenced over addresses, we just call it something else.
This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to grue

This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to ArchRecord

Wow!

“Minus is a finite social network where you get 100 posts—for life.”
in reply to dragontamer

Also, short form content with just a few sentences per post sucks


Your post could fit on Mastodon

in reply to iopq

This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to dragontamer

How is mastodon healthier? Please provide examples.
Healthier for whom? As there’s an extensive list of people harmed that absolutely do not find mastodon “healthy” let alone “healthier” particularly Black and Brown folks.
Bluesky defaults to the same way feeds are presented as Mastodon does, so your statement is false
in reply to dragontamer

Look I love lemmy/reddit style social networks and I don't disagree with the shallow reasons for why twitter has a character limit but there are legitimate and interesting reasons for character limits to posts. Is it better? probably not but sometimes less is more.
in reply to dragontamer

Microblogging is definitely useful for many things, short and quick thoughts, links to news articles, jokes, memes etc. You can also comment and share things easily. Microblogging actually resembles instant messaging in a lot of ways, just with an undefined ’group chat’ size.

I find it kinda funny that Twitter has become so toxic that people start thinking there must be something wrong with the format.

Also RSS clearly can’t replicate a big chunk of the desirable properties of microblogging (eg. easy sharing and commenting).

in reply to dragontamer

They are in competition with Mastodon, and have a marketing budget.

Five years from now, those platforms will become enshittified as their budgets dry up. They will need to milk the users for revenue. Well see another surge in a few years, until they learn that Mastodon is actually better.

in reply to Wiz

Then the next Billionaire with a massive ego and huge budget comes out and makes another one.

Or we get Jack Dorsey making a new company for a 3rd time.

in reply to dragontamer

Because Threads and BlueSky form effective competition with Twitter.


why is that though?

in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

I think because when it comes to Instagram or Twitter type social media more people probably use it only to follow accounts and have no interest in being involved in it. So closer to treating it like a rss reader than something like lemmy or reddit. And conversation feed sucks in general.

I use squawker for Twitter. Can't comment, like, sub, or whatever and account follows are just local feeds like Stealth for Reddit or NewPipe or Freetube. And that's all I need from it.

in reply to stardust

Both Intsagram and Twitter will fill your feed with random people / brands you don't follow.

It's all about the dopamine hit.

in reply to Prandom_returns

Not with squawker for Twitter. Displays only people you follow and in chronological order. There's no recommendations or ads.
in reply to stardust

When you say "people...", assume that most use the native app.
in reply to Prandom_returns

Regular people likely care more about being able to follow who they follow than ads, which they are more likely to put up with even for basic browsing. Last bit was just how I use it.
in reply to stardust

I'm just saying, that they are really, really inefficient as RSS for everyday people since the are more posts you didn't subscribe to, than the ones you subscribed to.

Hence saying that it's what people use them for IMO , genedally, is incorrect.

in reply to Prandom_returns

I'm saying they are using it like a rss in the fact that they are mainly there just to follow and be fed content. It's where they go if they want direct content submissions from blank famous person.

You seem more fixated on arguing semantics.

This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

because its name is Mastodon, something that when people google it pulls up a band.

Also because it's trying to be a hot fresh new thing but it's literally named after an animal that's extinct.

If it had a catchier and more unique name it probably would have caught on more.

in reply to fluxion

ZING!

And dipshit elon literally argued in court that "twitter doesn't exist anymore"

HMMM MAYBE SOMEBODY SHOULD INVENT IT

🤔

in reply to Cyrus Draegur

Yeah, lemmy suffered from this too, SEO is completely neglected when picking name.
in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

i have a mastodon account but it’s completely useless for me.

the only thing i use twitter for is to follow updates and news from professional journalists and artists who are not on mastodon and likely will never be. if your job depends on twitter, switching to mastodon is not going to happen.

if i want to engage with random average people, i come here to lemmy.

This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to acosmichippo

Uff, imagine getting news from a rightwing nutjob owned social network. Big yikes.
in reply to Prandom_returns

sports news, get off your high horse.
This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

Honestly my biggest issue is getting randomly banned from trans spaces for expressing my own lived experience with surgery and how I view my own body and gender. They're so "inclusive" that they start excluding people that don't use their very specific language or share their beliefs exactly. They keep kicking people out then wondering where all the people went!
in reply to Apytele

That's true of a lot of spaces who have been historically discriminated against. They become so hyper-aware of any criticism, that they immediately think anyone who has an experience different than their own is "the enemy".
in reply to Apytele

You may have heard of Folsom Street Fair? The sex & kink positive, all-inclusive, world-famous, 2-day long, San Francisco street fair?

For the first time in over 2 decades of attending my husband and I were turned away from the new, unmarked, Trans & Non-Binary Gate & Safe Space because we weren’t, nor did we identify, as such.

in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

Mastodon is pretty different to its competitors. It looks similar to Twitter / Bluesky, but the way the social network functions is completely different.

It's designed to be anti-infuencer... One of the things I hate about most social media platforms is a few people get all the attention. There are a few reasons for this, but it's not really based on merit.

I think a lot of people joined Mastodon wanting a Twitter clone. It's obviously not and Bluesky is, so people moved there. The approach Mastodon takes is far from perfect, and may not work out in the long run. But it seems like it's worth at least trying something different.

in reply to mutant_zz

It’s designed to be anti-infuencer


When my own feed, free of the algorithm, did not have content of interest. Because I or others took turns shouting into the void. Then I would go on the explore /front page where there was definitely an algorithm of influencers, many who had follower counts of thousands, talking about the same stuff. Many seemed to be upper middle class Americans .

I soon hated them, but many were broadcast to other instances’ front page too. Between them and lack of interaction from people I wanted to hear from, I left

in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

I never liked the microblog format so while I've had acouple masto accounts since 2016 I never used it. But i also never used twitter.
in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to Lvxferre

I disagree with your and the author's conclusions.

I have made my own long comment about it in thread, so here I am going to focus on your chart.

First, I will accept the data of the chart at face value, it seems resonably accurate and I don't have any other data to work off of.

My point is that you are interpreting it wrong.

To me the declining slopes after the sruges are not relevant to any long term conclusions, they follow a highly predictable curve and doesn't mean much.

If you look at the end of the graphs you can even see it growing slightly, that is obviously not evidence of anything yet, but to me it is an indication of either a start of another surge, or stability.

I believe you are too quick at spreading doom for Mastodon, give it half a year and look at the stats then, we won't see a meteoric rise of active users any time soon, just accept it and work with more realistic expectations.

in reply to stoy

in reply to Lvxferre

The slopes you meassure are still tied to the preceeding surges, so I can't treat them as any indication of success/failure.

To me it kinda looks like we are in the trough of disillusionment, which is a normal period of any new tech/system.

With improvements to the network we soon hit the slope of enlightenment.

in reply to stoy

Context for other users - the user above is likely referring to the Gartner cycle:

Image/photo

As anyone here can see, it looks nothing like that pattern that I've highlighted.

If the success condition for Mastodon is "to become a long-term viable and attractive alternative to corporate-owned microblogging", then improvements of the platform are necessary.

To be clear on my opinion in this matter: I want to see Mastodon to succeed, I want to see X and Threads closing down, and IDGAF about Bluesky. However I'm not too eager to engage in wishful belief and pretend that everything is fine - because acknowledging the problem is always the first step to solve it.

in reply to Lvxferre

You are absolutely right that I am refering to the Gartner cycle.

It doesn't fit exactly, but the general pattern fit very well with the first half.

The Mastodon graph just happens to have two hype sections.

in reply to stoy

in reply to Lvxferre

Half the users of the initial peek are still active?

Doesn't sound too bad if there would be events that bring new users from time to time.

This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to vxx

Yeah, the peaks themselves and the quick (~2m) drop after them are not the big deal. The big deal is to slowly bleed users. It's really problematic in the long term; by no means "MASTADON IS DOOMED!", but more like "Mastodon, you need to step your game up."
This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to Lvxferre

you don’t sell a novel tech named after an extinct animal


They didn't, Mastodon is named after the metal band (which is named after the extinct animal) 🙂

Either way, back in 2008 I bet people were making fun of Twitter for being named after bird sounds, so.

in reply to Handles

I wasn't aware of the connection with the band - thanks for the info! Still, people are bound to associate "mastodon" first and foremost with the critter.

Either way, back in 2008 I bet people were making fun of Twitter for being named after bird sounds, so.


I don't remember but you're likely correct. There's a difference though - Twitter didn't need to capitalise on every single tiny advantage, Mastodon does it, and while the role of branding might be small it still gives you (or your competitors) some edge.

in reply to Handles

They created a name clash with the band on purpose? Because they're fans? That's rich.
in reply to oldfart

"He", not "they" — if I understand correctly this was way back when Eugene Rochko was the sole developer — but yes. Same as Lemmy being named after Lemmy Kilmister, and Debian major versions after Toy story characters.

I don't see what's "rich" about that, it's just developers having personal tastes outside of coding.

in reply to Handles

Exactly copying a name is a bit strange to me. I have always been under impression that whoever named the social network has been unaware of the band.

Lemmy and Debian are not the same.

in reply to oldfart

Lemmy and Debian are not the same.


Specifically Lemmy is exactly the same — a direct namedrop in tribute of a known musician or band. It's really no weirder than a band naming itself after archduke Franz Ferdinand, or after Nikolai Gogol 🤷

in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

Bluesky, using ATProto, which as near as I can tell is not used by anyone else, is not part of the fediverse as a result. Since both ActivityPub, and ATProto, and for that matter also Zot, are all open sourced protocols, it is my hope someone will build bridge software that incorporates and provides interoperability between both. Hubzilla would seem an ideal place for that to happen since that is already it's role, to bridge multiple protocols.
in reply to Nanook

Actually, quick fun fact, there's already bridges. Bridgy Fed offers Activity Pub <> AT bridging, and Mostr offers Nostr <> Activity Pub bridging (and can be chained with Bridgy Fed to offer Nostr <> AT bridging). Not aware of any Zot bridges except the Hubzilla plugin that lets you follow AP users.

Fediverse reshared this.

in reply to Nate

@Nate I was not aware there was a plugin for Hubzilla, I will try to chase that down.
@Nate
in reply to Nate

@Nate I attempted to locate AP plugin for hubzilla but could not, not in the addons, not mentioned on the hubzilla site, and could not find with gargoyle search. Can anyone tell me where to obtain?
@Nate
in reply to Nanook

"Pubcrawl" is what you're looking for. Probably not the best SEO optimized name if you don't know it by name, but works well afaik.

framagit.org/hubzilla/addons/-…

Fediverse reshared this.

in reply to Nate

@Nate Thanks but no. Pubcrawl is the ActivityPub protocol, I've got that and it talks to Friendica fine. What I am looking for is the plugin to talk to ATproto used by Bluesky.
@Nate
in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

Mastodon is not struggling.

  1. Mastodon is not a single entity, if mastodon.art dies tomorrow I would just create a new Mastodon profile on another instance.
  2. Yeah, Mastodon use surged in 2022 and 2023, and yeah most users didn't stay around, but compared to the numbers before 2022, Mastodon has s big bump of new users.

Looking at two surges of new users seeing the vast majority not stick around and missing that a sizable chunk still stayed is missing the point.

This article would never have been written if the user increase didn't have temporary surges, that result would be the same number of users, but less brand recognition.

Mastodon is also not driven by the same kind of metrics as a centralized system, plenty of people can just run their own instance just for the fun of it, they don't need constant growth.

So calm down, and take it slow.

Don't sell Mastodon short.

in reply to stoy

But the issue is that the temporary surges are not even followed by stability, they're followed by decline. That's not a recipe for sustainability.

Don’t sell Mastodon short.


Alternative analysis: it doesn't help it to pretend there's not a problem.

in reply to JubilantJaguar

But the issue is that the temporary surges are not even followed by stability, they’re followed by decline. That’s not a recipe for sustainability.


You mean after a surge there's less active users than before?

in reply to Carighan Maconar

The graphs suggest that there is a dependence on surges to counteract slow decline.
in reply to JubilantJaguar

On the very end of the graph you can see it sort of beginning to stabalize, there was even a small uptick in the second to last point, and sure, the last point shows a small decrease again.

My point is that it is too early to call out for danger regarding mastodon, that is too alarmist and may scare new users from the platform, speeding up the end of Mastodon.

So untill we have a period of time without surges it is hard to determine user growth

in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

I tried to replace Twitter by Mastodon but, in the end, I just left Twitter and don’t use Mastodon at all. The main reason I think is because the « onboarding » is painful. I never succeeded to find interesting people to follow. I faced many ghost accounts from people posting once a month or stopped a few years ago.

If you don’t find people by yourself, no one is going to see your posts and so, you won’t be able to find new people to follow by posting.

I don’t like what Twitter became, but the base principle of the algorithm (before it became X with the paid subscriptions) was working great for me. I was constantly adding new people to the mix, and removing inactive ones every month.

If I struggled this much with Mastodon, I am not surprised many people create an account and leave a few days / weeks later.

in reply to djidane535

Similar experience here. I have a nicely curated list of people I follow on twitter, they often retweet other users that are similar and I have a nice feed of good content that slowly grows without ever running into toxic assholes. On mastodon I couldn't get anywhere close to that no matter how much I tried.
in reply to djidane535

This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

Definently had the feeling of walking into a gay bar and not knowing anyone, like the article says.

I thought it was pretty cool personally because I never interact with gay people (afaik) in real life. And we have computer tech as a common interest, that's why we are on mastadon... But for people who are not into tech, I guess it's not so much to talk about maybe.

in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

i wish Lemmy would embrace Mastodon and make it easy for Lemmy users to join that network
in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

While I agree with the article and a lot of comments, I am still active on my Mastodon account and I am enjoying it more than ever.

Disclaimer: I'm a white male westerner working in IT. 😉

A friend of mine works in linguistics and education. He was an avid Twitter user and has since migrated to Bluesky and Mastodon. He says, Mastodon is quite complex and clunky but on Bluesky there's not much happening in his bubble.

For me, the quality of the conversation and the regional character of my local instance is a big plus on Madison. On Lemmy, I read a lot on international and tech topics, but on Mastodon, the conversation is related more to my countries politics and my region.

So, maybe they lost a lot of users. But the 14% that stayed are a good start for quite a vivid community.

If anyone has questions on how to get something out of Mastodon, ask away or follow me here: mateng@nrw.social.

in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to Cyno

The first rule of Mastodon is "filter the term 'Mastodon'".

While you're at it, filter out mentions of any other social media you can think of. All of that metadiscourse is apparently important for people to get off their chests, buy it's numbing to read.

I'm fairly happy using Mastodon, but the lack of algorithms made it necessary to curate my feed very strictly. I turned off boosts/reposts in my app, too, and I now have a slow-moving, low-drama newsfeed that doesn't stress me out just opening it.

This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to Handles

If I do all that then my feed is going to be even emptier than it is now
in reply to Cyno

That's how filters work, yes. Follow a few hashtags of interest to find people who post about stuff you care about, it'll fill back in.
in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

I kinda want to give it another try. There was once a blogpost posted here (i think) about basically "how to have fun on mastodon", something like that, but i can not find it anymore. Anybody remember this and got a link?
in reply to AchtungDrempels

Can't recall what the title was, but I do remember reading a guide of sorts that essentially boiled down to "start following tags first, you can filter people later".
in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

I kind of don’t want it to succeed to the level of Twitter. All the people I like on Mastodon are there now and the trolls and chuds are mostly staying away because they don’t get the attention of millions of eyeballs.
This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

I have a Mastodon account and now on my fourth, fifth instance. I instance hop a lot, which helped me find my people.

I dont agree with a huge chunk of what was said in the post. But I understand where the white people in Bali reference comes from. I am an Asian woman in tech and took me awhile to find people that I can actually connect with. What I like about Mastodon is the fact that I can find niche topics that I wont see in other social media. Also, want to flag that I no longer have accounts in proprietary social media since 2017 which probably helped my drive to find an online community.

In saying so, I have faced some crazy level of stalking (one person only so I guess its isolated?) to the point that this person messaged me on Linkedin and emailed me to tell me I was being impersonated on Mastodon. Because he didnt believe that I am myself??? He went on saying, Hi Miss, I saw youre being impersonated blah blah.

But I also want to mention that I have met so many amazing people through Mastodon.

Its a weird space, but I am weird so I guess I belong there. Loo

in reply to katamari_22

There definitely are some great people there. Finding the right instance makes a big difference... unfortunately, almost eerybody starts off on mastodon.social, which for most people isn't a great choice, and don't realize they can move -- and when they do try to move, they lose their posting history which is annoying.
in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

There's just not many people on there. And I already never used Twitter except to read in-time updates from people and companies, so naturally with many of them being on Threads or Bluesky, that's where I'd go to get that information.

I mean it's just normal to have a "social" part to social media, no?

in reply to Carighan Maconar

This is a baffling comment. There are tons of people on mastodon, more than I could ever hope to keep up with. I have a couple hundred accounts on follow and never manage to keep up. Honestly it could use some sorting.
in reply to Rob Bos

I don't want to follow random people though? Twitter was useful as a way to follow specific companies and people to know when say, a service goes down or an update is released.

These people and companies aren't on Mastodon.

in reply to Carighan Maconar

This is the thing a lot of Mastodon users seem to miss. I was on Twitter because of specific people and companies. They aren’t on Mastodon, so I have no use for it.
in reply to BURN

There are a lot of companies on the flipboard side, which as far as I know, most servers haven't defederated
in reply to Carighan Maconar

Yeah, chicken and egg. Unfortunate twitter has now locked down feeds so you have to be logged in, so also fuck them on that point.

It's a tradeoff. I am so disgusted by twitter that I chose to give that up and leave.

in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

I agree with top comment.

I'm Indonesian. Most of trending fediverse are Western related topics which It's not relevant to me.

There's one time when I randomly post about my country politics, and people on Mastodon just assume or comment using Western mindset.

Other than this Lemmy account, I mostly stick with hobby-related fediverse that mostly East Asian and Southeast Asian people (mostly Misskey instance)

Also, Indonesian is currently the highest user on Twitter, recently bypassed Brazil. People still use it as our local feed is... well localized. No Western-related discussion and much more comfy.

This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to nasi_goreng

That was a great comment. It's frustrating because the fediverse should be good at making it easy for people to find topics their interested in ... but it doesn't work out that way in practice.
in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

Fediverse reshared this.

in reply to Nate

Re blue sky, is anyone actually federating with it? I don't know of any other instances besides the official one.
in reply to ColonelThirtyTwo

Yeah, right now the way I think of it is that Bluesky is (conceptualy) a single big instance, connected to the rest of the ActivityPub fediverse via Bridgy Fed (which speaks both AT and ActivityPub). Bluesky's decentralized in a different way, and the broader ATmosphere (apps that use AT protocol) is growing as well, but it deosn't really have the same concept of instance.
in reply to ColonelThirtyTwo

This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to ColonelThirtyTwo

Sorta/mostly. The protocol has a bit of a different model then Activity Pub, and it's in development so there are some limitations, but it's been opened and there's people hosting their own PDSs now (the part of Bluesky that hosts your account).

To my knowledge there's only two AT relays (the part that aggregates content from PDSs), Bluesky itself and very recently frontpage (a link aggregator). That makes the network fairly centralized right now, although BlueSky/AT has made a lot of progress in the last 9 months in terms of opening up so I expect it'll be a lot less centralized this time next year. I'm also betting that somebody will make an AT client that pulls posts directly from PDSs instead of going through a relay at some point.

Fediverse reshared this.

in reply to Nate

Good points! Agreed very much about all protocols growing, and that the ActivityPub fediverse is broader than just Mastodon.
in reply to Dame

Sure

github.com/0n4t3/nipy-bridge

Readme is overdue to actually be finished, but the script itself is working. Can be run locally on desktop or termux, though some clients on desktop need a custom host added since they don't like localhost and amethyst only uses it if you don't add it as a local relay.

This entry was edited (1 month ago)

Fediverse reshared this.

in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

I made a Mastodon account during that blitz in '22. Yes, content wasn't there yet, but honestly, it was the interface for me. It's UI didn't feel simplistic enough to me as someone just getting started with it.

Lemmy may have faced a similar fate for me if it weren't for the smooth interface of Sync to be honest. I know many on here are leaps and bounds beyond my tech proficiency, but so many folks are still in the stone ages writing their passwords on post-it notes etc so to think that they'd adopt something like Mastodon over Twitter or Lemmy over Reddit seems like the bigger counterparts will always win just on sign-up flow and instant gratification.

in reply to Kcap

Yeah, Mastodon's interface has a lot of complexities. It drives me crazy when people say "just like email" ... here's the most recent diagram of what posts are visible in your federated timeline.
This entry was edited (1 month ago)

reshared this

in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

It's not dead but it has one big and massive issue that prevents mass adoption - discovery. If I can't just write the name of my friends in search and find them no matter where they made their account - for an ordinary user, or one that comes from centralized services, this seems extremely alien and hostile.

And in the end, if you can't find your friends, you want to interact with, what is the point of using the service?

Luckily, Mastodon is working on a discorvery protocol that should offer a way to find people across the board, which will hopefully make the Fediverse "appear" centralized to the average Joe while maintaining all the benefits of decentralization to the advanced users.

in reply to Fedditor385

Problem: even with discovery, if your friends are on Threads or X, you still won't find them on Mastodon. But its a step in the right direction.
in reply to blue_berry

You would be able to find them if every instance didn’t decide to defederate with Threads.
in reply to blue_berry

Unless you can follow specific people on blocked instances, this is a fail. If my friend is on another instance which is blocked from my instance... whats the point of the fediverse? Might aswell go back to Facebook or X/Twitter. They are shitty but at least I can see my friends.
in reply to Fedditor385

You can put in their handle, with the domain they've signed up with

If you're looking for more wider fuzzy search for that; mastodon 4.4 is gonna implement independent search services, meaning that search will be expanded beyond one server, and you can find new accounts on other servers just by keywords

in reply to JoJo

I don't know or need to know the handle. I know my friends name and surname and that must be more than enough. Facebook doesn't need "@facebook" and twitter doesn't need "@twitter" to find people if they exist there. I know the feature is coming but it is the key to make it accessible to wide range of average Joes who don't want to, in their own vision, be rocket scientists to find people on the fediverse. It needs to be as simple as on facebook or other networks.
in reply to Fedditor385

I know my friends name and surname and that must be more than enough.


I see. However; no.

in reply to Fedditor385

I don't understand.
Mastodon has implemented global search a while ago. If I type "Steve" in the search bar, I get Steves from all sorts of places, not only from my instance.

Or are you talking about some sort of "contacts scan" implementation?

in reply to Fedditor385

Luckily, Mastodon is working on a discorvery protocol that should offer a way to find people across the board, which will hopefully make the Fediverse “appear” centralized to the average Joe while maintaining all the benefits of decentralization to the advanced users.


I'd bet that this will be so proprietary and non-standard again that it'll only work within Mastodon, maybe plus a few of its own soft-forks, effectively ignoring 30% of the Fediverse.

in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

Personally, I just don't enjoy that Twitter-like format. I never used Twitter so I find it... Awkward? To me its kinda like a platformer with bad controls, everything else about the game might be great but if it doesnt feel satisfying to play, I'll skip.

I still have my account and Megalodon on my phone but I just can't get into it.

in reply to AstralPath

I'm with you on the Twitter style format.
Reddit / Lemmy is nice because you can have actual conversations. Twitter you are basically shouting into the void and sometimes it shouts back.
in reply to SirEDCaLot

That format was pretty good for "Come see us live at the Sodbury Theatre in Glurpfortshire, Feb 32nd @9PM!"

I remember an instance where a Cracked.com article pointed out something like "5 creepy places on the internet" one of which was a dicussion forum in which one account was posting over and over, many times a day, about public appearances and such of the cast of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and readers showed up en masse to harass this person. Turns out she was off-label using a forum engine as her own little microtwitter to publish alerts to a fan club. But when the Cracked author rejected that context and substituted his own, it smelled a lot like Humanbeing151.

But yes in general I find discussion boards to be more useful; I think it's why they were invented first; Reddit and Lemmy are basically just different approaches to implementing Usenet.

in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

Drag simply thinks microblogging is boring. Nobody has anything interesting to say and nobody smelled drag's toots.
in reply to Dragon Rider (drag)

Nothing interesting for 99% population. Tech blogging is the hardest stuff and most tech youtubers pretty much stopped contributing. What's the point of sharing knowledge if any gamer on twitch has bigger audience than you maybe 200 - 300 live watchers and it's the a good number of viewers for a very well known polish security researcher ( ex Google ). So you know why social media is going shit
in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

I personally didn't like mastodon's UI style, I found it tedious to use and more complicated then needed.

There's no real similar product(at least out of what I've used) so nothing to run muscle memory on, and it deep dived into federation to the point it was confusing too confusing to figure out

This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to Pika

Agreed! It’s centralized around hubs instead of being truly distributed. Why isn’t an “instance” a set of users with an identical config file based on the agreed upon moderation/federation? Why do I have to join a single server that can go down repeatedly? It is giving up yhe advantages of cloud/distributed services.
in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

I stopped distro hopping and started hopping around Mastodon instances instead.

I currently have two active accounts. One is more established but the server goes down for days at a time.

The other is pretty robust but I'm still establishing myself there.

I echo the sentiment that there aren't a lot of Asian people on Mastodon. Although it seems that vivaldi.net is mostly Japanese people.

in reply to SeikoAlpinist

I echo the sentiment that there aren't a lot of Asian people on Mastodon. Although it seems that vivaldi.net is mostly Japanese people.


Asians are mainly using their national instances. Several largest Mastodon instances are Japanese (Pawoo, mstdn.jp, Fedibird), there are also pretty large Korean (planet.moe) or Chinese ones (m.cmx.im, alive.bar, wxw.moe). Outside East Asia, Asian instances tend to be small, though.

in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

Because no one is on it. I don't do twitter/facebook-like social media to interact exclusively with random people. I have no family or friends on Mastodon and couldn't tell you if any "content creators," for the lack of a better term, that I follow elsewhere are on it to follow.
in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

I don't see the point. It's like twitter. Never saw the point of that either instead of lemmy or Reddit honestly
in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to ben_dover

Federation is not something familiar or comfortable for an average normal person
in reply to capital

In the imaginary world where Gmail required you to visit Outlook to view the entire thread because it hadn't synced yet, yeah sure they're exactly the same. In the real world the email comparison stops being useful beyond explaining how @ monikers work.
This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

I have an account that I use to read, but I've never posted on Mastodon. Decided to tweet after seeing this post and I see a privacy option called "Quiet Public - Fewer Algorithmic Fanfares".

Seriously, wtf is this? What does that even mean? If techie people like me can't figure out Mastodon then you can't expect the general public to do that. I'm not blaming this feature in particular, but Mastodon is quirky in all the wrong ways.

This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

in reply to ElectroVagrant

Agreed, that would have been a much better title. There's a lot of negativity around Mastodon -- the Twitter migration in 2022 is often described as a "failure". It certainly wasn't a success, but I see it much more as a missed opportunity.

Network effects are certainly a big deal but every social network has to deal with the issue, and some succeed. Addressing some of the reasons for bouncing not only improves retention, but makes it more likely that people recommend it to their friends. So many of the problems from July 2023's Mastodon Is Easy and Fun Except When It Isn’t were problems back in 2017 as well ... how much progress has Mastodon made? Fortunately other fediverse software's making more progress, but it's still frustrating.

in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

I'll say it again, the name sucks. It's not cute, it sounds like mastrubate compared to twitter, it just is not catchy.

TicTic, snapchat, the apps that make it have a stupid catchy name, mastadon ain't it.

in reply to madcaesar

Twitter really isn't that much better. I remember when Twitter first started and it was getting a lot of crap for its weird name and that you made tweets. It count on eventually, but it's going to take constant exposure.
in reply to madcaesar

I do kind of like that they call messages "toots." That's my kind of stupid.
in reply to madcaesar

Mastodon wasn't launched by a VC-backed Silicon Valley startup to become the phone app that replaces Twitter.

It was created by a German high school graduate and metalhead all alone as not much more than StatusNet with a different UI and some features cut for simplicity. It was designed by a nerd for nerds, nerds who didn't rely on phone apps for everything. At this level, and back in 2016, not even an official native iPhone app was mandatory.

in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

Mastodon was around for a while, slowly being built up until 2022 when the big twitter surge happened. They had the perfect foundation to make it the next big thing and all they had to do was keep the people who joined, make it slightly easier to join, and develop a few features like quote posts.

  • They banned and defederated everyone who wasn't in a very narrow sliver of political and technological opinions.

Mastodon lost it's momentum, but had a second shot a year or two later. Threads joined the network offering a massive user base that could talk with Mastodon users. Then Bluesky blew up and that was bridged so Mastodon could talk with those people too. Mastodon may not have been the center of things anymore, but it could be fully integrated into the other two.

  • Most servers defederated with threads and bridges.

There are other things that I'm sure play a roll as well. Luck, discoverability, easiness to join, people getting board, people looking at the next shiny thing, you name it. But it does look to be in many ways self inflicted.

in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

  1. You know all of those politicians and scientists people like to follow? Well, they're still on Xitter.
  2. I remember their "official" app claimed it was a third party app on the stores, which probably put off a lot of potential users. Any phone users will be getting an app by some randos no matter what they pick, which is a big trust issue for many of us.
This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

I use mastodon every day and I'm glad it's not dominate. It's not a vc funded a shit hole looking for a growth market. I use mastodon because not every one is there, is a nice little niche place where I can play with my friends in peace
in reply to nandi

Mastodon is the only place where I don't get triggered, and instead get inspired and/or informed.

Good moderation, no bots, no fascists, no "famous, because stupid" idiots. Just a nice bunch of people sharing cool, interesting shit. I absolutely love it.

in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

On the feature side, according to Mastodons recent 4.3 release post development is only 4 full time employees and a budget of under $500k annually. That is basically nothing in the realm of social media companies.

Improving Mastodons features requires money and resources, but Mastodons users are unwilling to pay for instances and unwillingly to fund development. Hell, the .world folks host a bunch of instances for collectively hundreds of thousands of users and they take in about $1k a month in donations. I’m surprised that even covers hosting costs.

So…it’s no wonder that it isn’t going to be as polished as other social media in ways that would reduce the attrition.

in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

Mastodon is my only presence on social media. I love it. I found (over time) a large community of people who share my different interests. I love the wokeness of it. I don’t miss my lefty mutuals who are somehow still on X/Meta. I love the absence of influencers, algorithms and nazis. I love discovery through following hashtags. I could go on and on. I’m fine with people hating it for all the reasons I love it. They would ruin the vibe if they moved there.
in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

I prefer Mastodon over Twitter for microblogging. However, I didn't use Twitter for microblogging, but to receive news (directly or at least officially) from game devs, directors and other creators.
in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

Because it doesn't have $100s of millions to throw at marketing, or the name dropping of Twitter creators behind it.

It is what it is. You can either be alright with being small, or hurl money into it, but the people who hurl money into things tend to want it back at some point, and that means becoming a shitty business.

in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

i posted in another thread how i think content discovery stinks on mastodon. bluesky is much better at it. mastodon feeds are a wall of noise
This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

I think people are tired of the 140 character type social networks, the novelty has simply worn off. It's either self-promotion or "I had two eggs for breakfast lol" type of posts.

People who came to Mastodon, posted "Hello world!" and didn't bother to set a profile picture or add a description will always complain about the lack of discoverability, or the place being boring.

You literally have to put in work to set up your feed, follow hashtags, people and post yourself for it to be a network and not just a feed of things. And I think people struggle with this concept a lot.

I do understand that it's not for everyone. But it's not a problem with Mastodon, it's just a natural filter IMO. "You have to put at least this much effort to integrate". Low-effort things are usually just rage-bait.

in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to IronKrill

This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to UnderpantsWeevil

in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

I've been engaging with Lemmy more than Mastodon. Lemmy allows for more interactions through discussions. To me, it seems like Mastodon is slower to get interactions (for context, I have accounts on three different instances and used to post dark/gothic/satirical/surrealist poetry written by me daily, but I haven't posted in days because no one seems to be really engaging with it). Mastodon has a lot of potential, but I think few are really committed to stick to the fediverse and all its potential.

As for why people don't come back, maybe they're confused about which instance to use since there are thousands of different instances for different purposes, I'm not exactly sure.

in reply to Daemon Silverstein

I never really got into Twitter format. Been more of a fan of long form discussion that can bring more insight. Mastodon and bluesky just fill that void, although has replaced twitter for me.
in reply to northendtrooper

Been more of a fan of long form discussion that can bring more insight


Me too. I don't like the 500 character limit. It forces us to use slangs and internet abbreviations. Also, it allows for less information when I post in Portuguese (I'm Brazilian, so it's my first language besides English) because Portuguese has all these long conjugations (differently from English). Some sentences are shorter in Portuguese (for example "O rato atravessou a rua" is shorter than "The rat crossed the street"), but they tend to be longer.

in reply to Daemon Silverstein

So... This is stalkerish, but I was curious about your dark/gothic interests and I read some of your comments and you seem like an interesting person. I'd be grateful if you could share your poetry (a link to your accounts or whatever medium). 😳 Sorry; thank you.
in reply to Katrisia

I read some of your comments and you seem like an interesting person


Thanks!

I’d be grateful if you could share your poetry


I use the same handle/nickname as here (dsilverz) on Mastodon's main instance (mastodon.social). There's a mix of poetry types and genres (some are really dark, found under the "Content Warning" Mastodon feature), but all of them tries to fit the 500 character limitation. There are other instances as well (one where I post AI imagery illustrating the poetry I've written, other has a plus 500 character limit, where I posted storytelling but has no many posts because it's not well federated) I'm yet to find a Mastodon instance that both supports over 500 characters and has a reasonable federation and user activity (so that posts gets to readers).

in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

Mastodon has a horrible UI and UX, at least in my opinion. I've found Misskey and its forks to be better.
in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

Also, let Mastodon shrink if that means that the "market share" of other native Fediverse server apps grows.

The fewer people think the Fediverse is Mastodon, and the more exposure the other stuff in the Fediverse gets and what features it has over Mastodon, the better.