|
This fellow wants the same experience from a completely different system, seems to me, which is also the reason that the Twitter people have had so much static from the Mastodon people - it's a different place, with different things going on, and very different assumptions. All of the negative writing I've seen has basically been different versions of "I have expectations as a user, and Mastodon has not met those expectations, so I can't recommend it" with no further examination. No questioning of their own assumptions and expectations, no respect for a culture that has evolved over years by its own bootstraps while they languished in comfy gardens run by evil autocrats, very rarely even a clear explanation of the differences between Mastodon and other networks. Mastodon is not "another social network" that comes from the same place as the others. It comes from hating the others and wanting something different from t them. These writers who come from this "why, Mastodon, should I bestow my precious attention onto your platform rather than these others?" as though Mastodon had something to gain from capturing your attention. It does not; Mastodon rejects the attention economy, so in fact, everyone should be asking themselves what kind of quality content they have to bring. Mastodon does not care about your attention, it only wants to provide you with the tools to find things that your attention craves with no fascism or vile spam or propagandizing by billionaires. Ask not what your social media can do for you - ask what you can do for your social network. |
To clarify:
1. I'm not leaving Mastodon.
2. I'm not going back to Twitter.
3. I'm not recommending Twitter.
4. I'm not switching to another social network.
5. I'm not recommending another social network. I even stated in the article that Threads is not a viable alternative to Mastodon.
I migrated from one Mastodon instance to another. My complaint was that too many Mastodon instance administrators are incompetent or irresponsible.
Moreover, I do expect any service to not experience unexpected data loss. Is that not a reasonable assumption?