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Showing Original Post only (View all)Found a beginner's guide to joining Mastodon. [View all]
https://medium.com/whither-news/on-joining-mastodon-d539eed5e41aOn Joining Mastodon --- From my vast experience of three weeks, a guide to diving in
Medium is a soft paywall. You might be "declined", but this page is archived.
https://archive.ph/Uzsv6
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Some excerpts:
It will be a pleasure to welcome you to the new neighborhood. Im quite liking it already. Once you arrive, youll find it familiar enough: You have a home timeline, a feed of just the people you follow, but with no algorithmic promotion, no ads. You can write posts (the verb to toot has, mercifully, become to publish) and boost others posts (AKA retweet) and reply to posts. You will receive notifications when people respond to you, boost your posts, and follow you. You cannot quote-tweet posts as of now because of the founders belief that this affordance leads to performative over conversational behavior. That contention is being contested
The two things that befuddle people getting started are how to pick an instance or server to join and then how to find folks. Mastodon is actually a few thousand servers or instances, in the parlance that each run versions of the same software and are all connected or federated in what is called the Fediverse, using an open-source protocol called ActivityPub. Every instance is independently run but can connect to any or all of the other instances, allowing you to connect with anyone on them. Not all of them are Mastodon; there are, for example, other servers for a photo-based social network called Pixelfed. No one owns this; no one can. That is the value of open source and federation. (Here is a post I wrote (archived here) that examines and explains some of the implications and opportunities of federation.)
It doesnt greatly matter what server you join as in this federated ecosystem, you can follow and converse with anyone on any server (except those that your host blocks; for example, the far-right, noxious Gab is blocked by most). Each server has its own rules. I am on mastodon.social, which is the biggest and is run by Eugen (@gargron).
The only real implications of joining a particular server are (1) that you can view a local timeline populated with the posts of all the people from that server and you might find that useful , and (2) you want a responsible host who is going to block the bad guys and moderate wisely. If once on Mastodon you find the grass greener on someone elses server, you can take your identity and your followers and go there that portability and interoperability is a key benefit and differentiation of the federated vs. the corporate and centralized internet. Keep in mind that the content you create on your first server stays there.
The two things that befuddle people getting started are how to pick an instance or server to join and then how to find folks. Mastodon is actually a few thousand servers or instances, in the parlance that each run versions of the same software and are all connected or federated in what is called the Fediverse, using an open-source protocol called ActivityPub. Every instance is independently run but can connect to any or all of the other instances, allowing you to connect with anyone on them. Not all of them are Mastodon; there are, for example, other servers for a photo-based social network called Pixelfed. No one owns this; no one can. That is the value of open source and federation. (Here is a post I wrote (archived here) that examines and explains some of the implications and opportunities of federation.)
It doesnt greatly matter what server you join as in this federated ecosystem, you can follow and converse with anyone on any server (except those that your host blocks; for example, the far-right, noxious Gab is blocked by most). Each server has its own rules. I am on mastodon.social, which is the biggest and is run by Eugen (@gargron).
The only real implications of joining a particular server are (1) that you can view a local timeline populated with the posts of all the people from that server and you might find that useful , and (2) you want a responsible host who is going to block the bad guys and moderate wisely. If once on Mastodon you find the grass greener on someone elses server, you can take your identity and your followers and go there that portability and interoperability is a key benefit and differentiation of the federated vs. the corporate and centralized internet. Keep in mind that the content you create on your first server stays there.
Lots more at the link(s).
Remember: Mastodon is a protocol (ActivityPub) and other sites can participate in this protocol. I read that tumblr is making plans to do so post haste.
https://techcrunch.com/2022/11/21/tumblr-to-add-support-for-activitypub-the-social-protocol-powering-mastodon-and-other-apps/
And there are other alternatives to twitter. (for a future post)
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I'll bet that lots of people are worried about Elon allowing antisemitism and who knows what else?
usonian
Nov 2022
#5
This feels like very useful information for those who get how that stuff works
msfiddlestix
Nov 2022
#4