Recently I’ve dove a little deeper into the Fediverse. I began with Mastodon like many others and I’m ready to move on. Mastodon as a software in comparison to similar services in the Fediverse like Calckey/Firefish, Friendica, Misskey, etc. just isn’t as good and the only thing it has going for it is an established user base and simplicity/lack of feature creep I guess. I’ve also had major difficulty finding any sort of conversation or getting followers, although that could just be because of me just not being really active on social media in general and being disinterested in discussing the most popular topics like politics.
I’ve been looking at another microblogging/Twitter type service to switch over to since I just like the concept of the Fediverse (I credit Kbin for being a great 2nd impression) but its been a struggle. It seems like in the microblogging space of the Fediverse, there are just a bunch of different platforms that do the same thing while trying to one up each other in some aspect. I’m not sure if there are large features that separate them besides UI, but this is just how it appears. If there is, please let me know.
This fragmentation is making it difficult to choose a platform, and I can’t imagine it’d be any easier for anyone new the Fediverse. Once I choose a platform, I have to choose an instance as well of course. I was going to join calckey.social/firefish.social but I’m a little hesitant now because mastodon.art defederated with it, and I follow multiple accounts from that instance. The drama that always surrounds defederation is a fundamental design flaw in the Fediverse, but I try to choose servers that don’t have these issues as I would rather not self-host right now. The Mastodon instance I have an account on has a great admin that lets the users decide when it came to a large move such as defederating with Threads.
I’m really beginning to see how the Fediverse can be complicated for new users, even if they understand the underlying technology. Unfortunately, these seem to just be deep problems with the Fediverse in general rather than just things to adjust to.
Anyway, enough ranting and back the question: which of these microblogging platforms should I even choose? Its making my head spin. Seems like Calckey would be the best for my needs at the moment.
BlueSky is made by Twitte- I mean X’s original founder, you might wanna try that out.
Yeah, Mastodon isn’t really that great. Unless you’re someone like me who’s trying to make a Flemish sounding nickname.
Trying to get an invite to it it’s difficult. I’ve been on the waiting list for ages!
I have an invite I can give if you want. It’s not my vibe and prefer mastodon, but hey to each their own.
Makes me wonder if there’s a Lemmy/kbin community/mag for bluesky invites, or if that’s violation of bluesky’s TOS.
Wow that would be rad thanks! How best to do it? I can give you a private relay email or is private messages here a thing?
Private message is a thing, but whatever works for you is fine with me! Private relay email works as well <3
Can you private message it please? I don’t want to put an email address online, silly I know!
Of course!
I’m on Bluesky. It’s vapid. Boring. I forget about it, check it once a week and nothing happens except people make a huge deal about cancelling someone. Not worth the hype at all.
And now I deserve to have some downvotes, I mean a lot of them.
Twitter’s original founder is crazy though, that’s not really an upside. And Bluesky’s underlying technology just feels like a worse version of Mastodon, the only reason people are going to it is because the names behind it are recognizable and it doesn’t ask you to choose a server
Oh. I guess you have a good point.
Kinda true. But fwiw the folks who built twitter know a thing or two about scale and discoverability. I haven’t really dug into The Mastodon implementation, nor the AT protocol of bluesky, nor ActivityPub of Mastodon. But the twitter API was decent, and I bet they’ve learned some lessons.
So while I’m on Mastodon mostly on principal, I imagine that bluesky can offer a few advantages for both users and hosts.
I don’t doubt they know things the devs of Mastodon don’t, and from the ways the winds are blowing they seem like the next big bet. But their priorities with Bluesky seem like they’re in the wrong place. The fact that virtually everything is public (including things like blocklists) makes me worry about the future of privacy on the platform. Though I have the same issues with Threads given that it’s run by Meta with its eternal quest to doxx all their users.
I’m their defense, blocks need to be public in federated systems like bluesky and Mastodon, because the various servers need to know that the block exists in order to respect it.
Gotcha, still new to Fediverse stuff so not sure how all of it works.