| >People obsessed with building their personal brand or audience or upvote score embody Are you projecting? None of that is in what I said; I just provided an easy metric. How about, people thank me for what I write. And it's not "product-brained" to say that an author writes to be read, a music maker wants to be heard, and an educator wants to reach as many people as could benefit from it. >You go there to have a good time and learn from others. Which goes to show, you need others to be there. And the others you learn from matter. >Some people are fundamentally product-brained and fail to metabolize the concept of federated social media. That's fine, it's better without them. Look, if "metabolizing concepts" of federated social is a requirement for a social network, but understanding concerns of others (evidently) is not, then everyone else is better without the social network of such people too. |
> but understanding concerns of others (evidently) is not
Your concerns can be understood without being catered to. Not everything has to be fit for your purposes. The world keeps turning without your permission.
Look fundamentally this argument is pointless. If you like mastodon then use it; lots of people do, certainly enough to make it worthwhile, and arguing about whether it will fail is a pointless exercise in trying to predict the future. Whining about how it doesn't meet your standards doesn't matter. It isn't a product that a company loses out on profit by failing to sell to you. From our brief interaction here I can tell you the platform really isn't greatly diminished by your lack of presence.