Mastodon

Mastodon is more than just a nicer Twitter. It's an experiment in large-scale, 
open-source, distributed social networking. It's no online utopia, but it is an 
exciting development for the open web.

By  Max Eddy  https://au.pcmag.com/social-media/47483/mastodon

BOTTOM LINE:
Mastodon is more than just a nicer Twitter. It's an experiment in large-scale, 
open-source, distributed social networking. It's no online utopia, but it is an 
exciting development for the open web.

PROS:
No fees, no ads, no data mining.
Unique, federated design.
Tweetdeck-like web experience.
Personal, global, and local feeds.
Powerful privacy tools.
Open-source.

CONS:
Zero documentation or guidance for new users.
Few mature clients.
Distributed design makes sign-up, user verification difficult.



Facebook and Twitter have defined a generation of the web, but free and 
open-source services like Ello and diaspora* have sought to provide an 
alternative.   Mastodon is the latest contender.

Named in honor of the progressive metal band, it's an open-source, radically 
anticapitalist, and surprisingly mature Twitter-style platform that emphasizes 
openness and uses a distributed, federated platform.

Unfortunately, some of its best features (ever heard of "federation" outside 
the realm of Star Trek before today?) are confusing to newcomers, and it 
certainly won't eclipse other platforms anytime soon. It is a radical vision 
that suggests a different kind of internet—one that, perhaps, will gain 
converts.

Like Twitter, but…

Remember the term "microblogging?" Probably not. It was meant to be the general 
category to describe Twitter, referring to Twitter's pithy, 
character-limit-enforced brevity. Considering that no other microblogging 
service has risen to prominence, the term has as much semantic weight as 
several feathers. But, in as much as anything can be a microblogging service, 
Mastodon is one.

MastodonInstead of Twitter's 140 characters, however, Mastodon offers you 500. 
After spending nearly a decade learning to cram complex thoughts into tweets, 
500 characters is almost overwhelming. Most of the time, I don't come close to 
the character limit. But it is easier to express a complete, nuanced thought, 
without resorting to tweetstorms.

Speaking of tweets, a note on terminology: On Mastodon, individual posts are 
called "toots" (not "tweets") and reposting someone else's toot is "boosting" 
(not "retweeting"). In a jab at Twitter's decision to replace the favoriting 
star with a heart, Mastodon uses a star, so you can show your appreciation for 
a toot. I've been using Mastodon for four months, and I still think "toots" 
sounds hilarious.

In most other respects, Mastodon is very much like Twitter. You follow other 
users to have their toots flow into your feed. You can respond to a toot and 
message other users publicly with an @ reply. Placing a hashtag (#) in front of 
a word creates an ad-hoc category that you can click on to find all other 
instances of that hashtag. These are features that Twitter users take for 
granted, but that actually didn't launch with the service. Being designed from 
the ground up in a post-Twitter world means that Mastodon's creator can deliver 
a product that benefits from Twitter's years of evolution.

Some features from Twitter haven't made it to Mastodon. Polls, quote-tweets, 
and analytics are just a dream. While you can view a toot and its responses at 
a static URL, just like on Twitter, it's harder to take action outside the 
web-based Mastodon client. Boosting and faving, for example, are difficult from 
a toot's static webpage. Searching, too, is difficult. I spent an hour 
searching through a timeline for a specific toot. Mastodon is surprisingly 
smooth and robust for a homebrew project, but the cracks show in cases like 
this.

Behind the Toots

What really sets Mastodon apart isn't the toots or the boosts, it's the code. 
Mastodon is an open-source project, the code being freely available on GitHub. 
This means that Mastodon benefits from transparency, with volunteers working to 
add new features and watching out for potential problems. It's built on the 
open GNU Social protocol, making it potentially interoperable with other GNU 
Social-based services. Your tweets and Facebook posts are bound to those 
respective platforms, but GNU Social has the potential to be infinitely more 
flexible. However, that potential hasn't been fully realized on Mastodon.

Being open-source means Mastodon has a fundamentally different ideology than 
most social media services. Mastodon is intended to be free and ad-free 
forever. Its creator has written that this lets the people working on Mastodon 
focus on making it better for users, without having to bow to Mammon. There's 
no data mining, no ads, and no rejiggering your timeline to show you promoted 
material.

Twitter and Facebook, by contrast, have made major changes to their service 
that were great business decisions but weren't designed to help the user. For 
example, both services use algorithmically ordered feeds by default (you can 
deactivate this feature on both) instead of chronologically ordered feeds. 
Twitter and Facebook say this helps surface the most interesting content, but 
it also allows for ads and promoted posts to be pushed to you. As a free, 
not-for-profit platform that can be tweaked by anyone with the knowledge to do 
so, these kinds of changes are unlikely if not actually impossible in Mastodon.

Mastodon also isn't a monolithic, single service like Twitter or Facebook. 
Instead, it's distributed. Volunteers install copies of the Mastodon software 
on servers they operate. These are called Mastodon instances, and they all work 
together as a federation. It's similar to the much-hyped, little-used diaspora* 
platform. You can join any instance and still be able to communicate with any 
other Mastodon user, regardless of the instance they're on. I should note that 
the Mastodon community has generated some pretty wonderfully named instances.

Mastodon

Think of it like email. There are lots of places that let you create an email 
account, but you can send email to, and receive email from, anyone. An 
Outlook.com email account can talk to a Gmail account, and so on. It's a simple 
concept, but one that doesn't really jibe with the popular understanding of 
social networks.

The Mastodon.social instance, for example, is the flagship instance of the 
service. It's currently closed to new sign-ups, meaning that users have to find 
another instance to join. This is a high bar for entry, made worse by the sheer 
dearth of explanatory documentation.

One of the interesting benefits of a distributed network is that no single 
operator bears the brunt of hosting all Mastodon users. Instead, the computing 
requirements are handled by each individual instance. That's allowed Mastodon 
to remain mostly operable, even after experiencing a massive spike in 
popularity.

The confusion about where Mastodon "is" is only compounded by usernames. If you 
and another person are on the same instance, you can @ reply them as you would 
on Twitter. If that person is on a different instance, you have to include the 
username and instance. So @maxeddy becomes @[email protected]. With the 
email analogy in mind, this doesn't seem so strange but, again, it's sure to be 
confusing to anyone more familiar with Twitter. Mastodon does autocomplete 
usernames, but it helps to know a user's instance.

This raises the issue of verification. Is @[email protected] the real Max 
Eddy? What about @[email protected]? The blue verified checkmark on 
Twitter might be an artificial tool of class construction (and probably data 
mining), but it also helps ensure you're talking to the right person. And, more 
importantly, that the wrong person can't easily pretend to be you. Without a 
rock-solid method of verification, Mastodon isn't likely to attract the 
celebrity interest that drove the early adoption of Twitter. But that seems to 
suit Mastodon just fine.

Behold, the Mammoth

Most of my time testing I was Mastodon I did so via its web interface, which I 
used on a MacBook Air running Google's Chrome browser. Because it's web based, 
you can access it on virtually any device. As long as there's a web browser, 
you're good to go.

There are a handful of mobile clients available for Mastodon, Tusky for Android 
and Amaraoq for iPhone being the most notable. None of these third-party 
clients have brought anything new to the table, however. There are also no 
desktop clients as of this writing. While that's frustrating in the short term, 
one of my big complaints about Twitter was how it virtually destroyed its 
third-party developer community. That seems unlikely to be the case with 
Mastodon.

When you log into the Mastodon instance you call home, you see four vertical 
columns. The layout is very similar to Tweetdeck, a piece of software whose 
interface I frankly loathe. Still, it gets the job done, and Mastodon's take is 
easy on the eyes using flatter colors than Tweetdeck. That's more than I could 
say about Ello. While the Mastodon interface resembles Tweetdeck, it only lets 
you manage one account. If you want to toot from another instance, you need to 
log in there, too.

Note that some instances might be tweaked to look different or use different 
icons. One admin I follow on Mastodon replaced the Toot button with a Florps 
button. And so it was law—at least on that instance.

The far-left column has a text box where you can compose your 500-character 
toots. There are buttons for adding emoji, hiding text behind a content warning 
(more on this later), and adding pictures. This last feature was the only one 
that gave me trouble, as Mastodon appears to use some image compression on 
large images that noticably distorts colors. I only had this problem for one of 
the images I uploaded, however.

A Globe button lets you choose the level of visibility of your toot, ranging 
from Public on all instances to Private, which hides your message except for 
the specific users you designate. You can also lock a post to only be visible 
to your followers, or set it to not appear on any public timeline. This is more 
of a Facebook-style tool, and offers far more flexibility than Twitter, which 
is all-or-nothing when it comes to tweet visibility.


Mastodon

Moving toward the right, the next column is the Home section, which shows toots 
from users you've followed. The next column shows Notifications. Settings tabs 
at the top of these columns let you change how they function. One noticeable 
option is the ability to shut off boosts and replies from appearing in your 
Home feed. Twitter lets you suppress user's retweets, but you have to adjust 
those settings on the user page for that Twitter user. Mastodon takes that 
power and gives it back to the people.

The far-right panel is a multiuse space, with shortcuts to toots you've 
favorited, a list of users you've blocked, and your account settings. It also 
lets you view your Local timeline and the Federated timeline. The Local 
timeline shows toots on your particular instance, sort of like the neighborhood 
news. The Federated timeline is the Mastodon fire hose. It's everything.

This distinction between the Home timeline of people you follow, the Local 
timeline, and the Federated timeline make Mastodon instances all the more 
important. You and your friends or local community could create your own 
instance and it would be your Local timeline. You'd still be connected to the 
rest of Mastodon through the Federated timeline, and could follow any Mastodon 
user in any instance and have their toots appear in your home feed. It's a 
completely unique experience, and one I am still trying to wrap my head around 
after using Mastodon for some time.

So far, Mastodon doesn't talk with Twitter. You won't have an easy time finding 
tweeting friends who have jumped to Mastodon, although there are third-party 
tools that can help. That said, I've taken some real pleasure in browsing 
through the local and federated feeds, talking (politely!) with randos, and 
feeling out the Mastodon experience. It's new territory, and there's a real 
sense of excitement exploring it.

Also missing are some of the fringe services found on the established social 
networks. There's nothing like Periscope or the excellent Facebook Messenger. 
Mastodon comes close to providing an experience similar to Twitter's Direct 
Message groups, but it's not as robust. That's not necessarily a problem for 
Mastodon users. You could, for example, delete your Facebook account and 
continue to use Messenger quite happily. Then again, the kind of person 
attracted to Mastodon in the first place seems more likely to be a Signal user.

Hell Is Other People

Mastodon launched quietly about a year ago, but exploded in recent weeks after 
being hailed as a new haven from the abuse and Nazi egg accounts that have come 
to define modern Twitter. But I'm quick to caution anyone who sees Mastodon as 
"like Twitter, but for not-awful people." There's nothing about Mastodon, aside 
from its comparably low user base, that makes it resistant to the siren song of 
internet bullshit. Even as I saw new users embrace the platform this past week 
and make their inaugural toots, I also saw some of the same combative, angry, 
vitriol that's on Twitter or Facebook these days.

The problem, in a word, is people. But there are a few things about Mastodon 
that might counteract some of the acid in modern electronic discourse. 
Mastodon's developer Eugen Rochko wrote on Medium:

"Very early on in the development of Mastodon I've decided that centralization 
and unexpected algorithmic changes were not the only one of Twitter's problems. 
Harassment and tools to deal with it have always been lacking on Twitter's end."

When you block someone on Mastodon, you don't see their posts under any 
circumstances. Not when they message you, not when someone you follow (and 
haven't blocked) mentions them, not when their messages are boosted into your 
timeline. You can also mute users or words, if you simply want to see less of 
them.

Mastodon

Mastodon also comes with a Content Warning tool. Click it, and your toot will 
be hidden behind an opaque block that other users must click before your 
message appears. You can customize the text that appears over the block, so you 
can post a trigger warning, set up a punchline, or warn people against 
spoilers. It's a flexible tool, and one that seems to have been embraced by 
Mastodon's early settlers.

Because there's no monolithic structure to Mastodon, the administrators of 
instances can take action against other instances. An admin could block an 
entire instance, for example, if it became the source of too much strife for 
users. Still, all of this requires active participation from communities of 
users and admins, which is quite different from the rather passive experience 
of using Facebook or Twitter. No one said Utopias came easily.

Building a Better Web

The limitations of Mastodon are undeniable. It's unlikely to get celebrity 
interest, and, given that one of the most popular Mastodon instances is called 
Marxism.party, it's unlikely to gain traction among brands and advertisers. Its 
federated nature means that it's hard for people used to the "big room" feel of 
Facebook and Twitter to understand, or even sign up. It's in desperate need of 
onboarding materials.

But some of those limitations come from its greatest strengths. Being federated 
means that the service has scaled surprisingly well, and it affords users the 
opportunity to create real digital communities, as well as create and enforce 
different rules on different instances. Open-source projects don't make money, 
but they do attract motivated volunteers. Mastodon has already revved in the 
course of my review, and it offers surprisingly mature features for a homebrew 
service.

There's also an important sense of buy-in with Mastodon. People are coming to 
the service not to recreate what they have on Twitter or Facebook, but to try 
and build something different. Maybe it's the powerful blocking and banning 
tools, maybe it's the sense of community fostered by individual instances and 
an emphasis on users owning their own identity and their data. Or maybe it's 
testing the limits of dank memes presented in 500 characters. Mastodon isn't 
going to replace Twitter any time soon, but it presents a vision of what a 
free, not-for-profit, people-powered social network can look like. It may not 
be as busy as Twitter, but I'm rather smitten with it.

--

Note, Yesterday:  
https://au.pcmag.com/social-media/93757/eu-joins-mastodon-social-network-sets-up-its-own-server


The European Union is the latest group to join the social network Mastodon, 
which has seen a surge of new users after Elon Musk's bid for Twitter was 
accepted.

On Thursday, the European Commission said it had set up its own server, dubbed 
EU Voice, to join Mastodon's decentralized social network, also known as a 
"Fediverse."

Follow us at: 
social.network.europa.eu/@EU_Commission<mailto:social.network.europa.eu/@EU_Commission>

The effort is currently only a pilot, but it represents the EU’s goal of 
supporting private and open-source software capable of rivaling mainstream 
social media platforms such as Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube. On the same day, 
the European Commission also launched an account for PeerTube, another 
decentralized platform that revolves around video sharing.

“With the pilot launch of EU Voice and EU Video, we aim to offer alternative 
social media platforms that prioritize individuals and their rights to privacy 
and data protection," said European Data Protection Supervisor Wojciech 
Wiewiórowski.

“In concrete terms this means, for example, that EU Voice and EU Video do not 
rely on transfers of personal data to countries outside the European Union and 
the European Economic Area; there are no advertisements on the platforms; and 
there is no profiling of individuals that may use the platforms,” he added. 
“These measures, amongst others, give individuals the choice on and control 
over how their personal data is used.”

The news could help boost visibility for Mastodon, which hopes to become a 
viable Twitter alternative. On Thursday, Mastodon founder Eugen Rochko reported 
that the decentralized social network had “gained 112,413 monthly active users 
in the last few days” after Musk announced his takeover of Twitter.

Mastodon has 384,000 monthly active users, Rochko added, which pales in 
comparison to Twitter's 229 million daily active users, about 40 million of 
whom are based in the US.

For now, the EU says its Mastodon server as a way for EU institutions and 
agencies to share news. It'll also solicit feedback on Mastodon and PeerTube, 
and says it "hopes that this first step will mark a continuity in the use of 
privacy-compliant social media platforms."
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