Pallas | 29 | #Argentina | #Vegan | Disabled | Fat | #Transoutherine + clusterouther & anderflor | #Aplatonic and plato-averse | #Gay (Similo) | Grey-orchid in a non-platonic way and queering all types of attraction

#ClassicalMusic, #ClassicLiterature, #VisualKei, #Astronomy #Linguistics

  • 0 Posts
  • 23 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
cake
Cake day: June 12th, 2023

help-circle

  • I think part of the issue with Ello was that they sell themselves as non-corporative social media while maintaining two of the most important characteristics of corporative social media:

    • Centralisation and lack of federation
    • Being closed-source

    The story would have gone completely different if they

    • Had made it open-source allowing users to contribute to the project, both as devs and through donations.

    • Added decentralisation and federation, allowing others to make their own Ello servers. This could have taken a lot of weight (financial and otherwise) from the developers/founders. Users cost money. Dividing the user base within different servers, pay by and moderated by different people means dividing the costs.





  • Why is mastodon the worse one?

    Lack of essential features and the toxicity within it servers.

    It was meant to be federated, privacy friendly, self-hosted, less toxic twitter alternative for small communities

    1- I didn’t say it had to be a twitter clone. What I said is that some people coming from Twitter that weren’t convinced by Mastodon, may be could have find other microblogging more adequate for their needs and usage. Each microblogging platform has its personality and usability, and Mastodon wasn’t for them.

    The problem is when people are told that there’s nothing beyond Mastodon (regarding microblogging) on the fediverse, so they end up running away from the fediverse, after not finding a home on Mastodon.

    2- It failed at being less toxic.

    Witch hunts over petty arguments, negative reaction to newcomers not knowing how things work, racism that gets minimalised as “not as bad” by big part of the user base.

    The fact that it doesn’t have quote posting because it “allows for toxic behaviour”, when other platforms have it and say toxicity is almost non-existant in using that feature, it’s in itself a red flag.


  • No, not really. Firefish is a microblogging platform. Kbin is a link aggregation and topic discussion platform, with a wonky attempt at microblogging.

    I wouldn’t call it an alternative to Mastodon or Twitter either, because Firefish has features that neither of them have. The only Microblogging platform it could be seen as an alternative to, now that it has gone beyond being just a fork, is Misskey.

    People tend to compare Firefish and Misskey more to Tumblr, but they still have things that either were inspired by other microblogging platforms (twitter, included), or that are unique to them. So they aren’t fully “Tumblr alternatives” either.


  • Why stick to the worse one, though?

    The point of federation is that you can create community with people all over it, no matter what software the server they joined is running.

    Mastodon being too big to the point that 90% of it users things it’s the whole fediverse is not positive nor contributes to create an stable community. Many people coming from twitter run from the fediverse, because they’re told there’s nothing other than mastodon, which they find hard to use, lacking and extremely toxic.

    Misskey, Firefish, Akkoma, GoToSocial, Microblogpub, etc give people other options that may fit their need for/usage of a microblogging platform better than mastodon does, as each (including Mastodon and each of its forks) has it’s own “profile”




  • Cool things on Firefish/clackey, that Mastodon and most of it forks don’t have:

    • Quote notes (Misskey and Akkoma, a fork of Pleroma, also have them)

    • Antennas. They allow you to add words, tags and accounts to lists and create parallel timelines that you can see whenever you want, without having to follow this accounts

    • You can create personalized timelines for certain accounts to appear in.

    • It has a drive section where you can upload files.

    • Channels. This are public local group that the members of a server can create, join and interact within.

    • Private chat groups. Local only.

    • Emoji reactions

    • Clips. These are collections of notes (“note” is the name post receive in Misskey and Firefish)

    You can create multiple clips and manage them by giving a name and description to each. You can also choose to make your clips public to make them available to other users.

    • You can create custom web pages. For now they don’t federate.

    • Customisable (by admin) character limit.


  • I don’t know how I feel about the new name, but I’m curious to see what new features come with the rebranding.

    Calckey/Firefish is by far my favourite microblogging platform. It has a greater number of features than mastodon, and I personally find it more inviting.

    What I wanna know is, with it being its own thing now (rather than a fork of misskey), while it still be supported by Misskey apps, like MilkTea?


  • I think Calckey/firefish, because of it history and characteristics, tends to have more themed instances. Many of the so called “general” instances, are multi-topic or multi-fandom themed instances rather than actual general purpose ones.

    I think someone not used to these things would see ‘Coming Soon’ and just leave it as not launched yet.

    It’s probably not launched yet. The main instance hasn’t open (or rather moved from calckey) and other intances are moving from either old Calckey or foundkey.

    Firefish has already set up a new site and infrastructure under their new name. The flagship instance of Calckey.social is in the process of moving over to Firefish.social. The migration effort is intended to retain users, posts, credentials, and data. The move is expected to officially happen over the course of the next few days.

    I would say to wait at least a week to check the official instance.







  • The problem here is that your data is not only recopilated by your server and accessible to your server admins, the servers of the communities/magazines or people you interact with also recopilate any activity you have in relation to any community/magazine or user hosted in their server.

    So, while the admin of your server has the obligation of deleting your data if you ask for it, the other servers admins don’t necessarily have that obligation.

    Also, I’m reading the GDPR and the “right to be forgotten” that many are quoting seems to refer to personal information only.