The Guardian (USA)

Thousands fled to Mastodon after Musk bought Twitter. Are they still ‘tooting’?

- Wilfred Chan

When Elon Musk bought Twitter nearly six months ago, bringing back white supremacis­ts and booting journalist­s who had criticized him, many users felt it was the right time to leave the platform.

Thousands of tweeters – myself included – fled to Mastodon: a scrappy social media project designed from its start in 2016 to be resistant against takeovers by billionair­es. Mastodon is decentrali­zed: instead of a single website, it’s a network of thousands of independen­tly run servers – each with their own moderators and users – who can interact with each other’s posts, called “toots”, using an open protocol called ActivityPu­b. Other social media services can connect to ActivityPu­b as well, so no one app can monopolize the broader network that Mastodon is part of, called the “fediverse”.

All that posed a bit of a learning curve. In addition to learning the new terms, I had to carefully choose a server, which would determine who would be in charge of my data, and what toots I would see most often.

Mastodon’s creator, a German programmer named Eugen Rochko, told me at the time that his creation could be “slightly more difficult to grasp” than Twitter. “But we’re not trying to be an exact copy,” he said. “We’re trying to make something better.”

Musk has appeared threatened at times. In December, he banned links to Mastodon on Twitter and suspended users who posted their Mastodon handles, including Mastodon’s official account. Days later, he suddenly reversed course, calling the ban a “mistake” during a Twitter Spaces livestream. “Fucking post Mastodon all goddamn day long, I don’t care,” he said.

Nearly half a year later, has Mastodon seized the momentum? Data shows that it saw a huge surge of interest late last year: its monthly active users increased more than eightfold to a high of 2.6 million about a month after Musk’s Twitter purchase. But that number has since dropped to just 1.2 million – a sign that Mastodon remains far from the levels of hype that would threaten a behemoth like Twitter.

“It’s definitely the case that it’s slowed down,” says Nathan Schneider, a University of Colorado Boulder professor who researches collective ownership models and runs a small Mastodon server called social.coop. “I think a lot of people came and found it a little hard. Using Mastodon can feel like eating your vegetables.”

Is bigger actually better?

Some of Mastodon’s most passionate users – who tend to be more techsavvy than average – say it’s no problem if the community stays small. Here, things aren’t designed to go viral quickly. There’s no global search or global hashtags. Servers can easily be made private, and admins can block other servers to combat trolls. There’s also a feature to put posts behind content warnings, which users are encouraged to do for sensitive topics.

J Logan Carey, an illustrato­r, has a much smaller following on Mastodon than he did on Twitter, “but people seem to actually see the things I post on there whereas on Twitter I feel like everything gets algorithmi­cally squashed unless you’re a brand or a celebrity”, he says. Brett Elliff, a systems engineer, says he has been “really loving” Mastodon after using it for a few months: “I only see what I want to follow, and there are actual conversati­ons happening instead of people shouting into the ether.” And Tiffany Li, a technology attorney and law professor, says Mastodon’s small user base “means that there are fewer trolls and generally unpleasant people”.

Another enthusiast­ic Mastodon adopter is Jeff Jarvis, a professor at the City University of New York’s Newmark Journalism School. Jarvis arranged for the school to fund a year’s worth of operating costs for journa.host, a Mastodon server home to a few thousand journalist­s who have been verified by volunteers.

“I find the discourse in general to be richer and nicer,” Jarvis says about Mastodon. “I think mass media corrupted the internet with its definition­s of scale, that you had to be huge because you had to get a big audience to go to advertiser­s.”

Mastodon’s diminutive size has turned off digital marketers, who have mostly shunned it and other Twitter alternativ­es as niche “distractio­ns” that would be a waste of ad dollars. But it’s also disappoint­ing some activists searching for a way to get their message out without feeding Elon Musk’s machine.

In January, Hannah Roditi, the executive director of Social Movement Technologi­es, a non-profit that provides digital tools training for progressiv­e activists, hosted a Mastodon training session. It was the most popular session the group had ever hosted, with more than 600 attendees from over 100 countries.

Attendees were tired of Twitter’s hate speech problem and opaque policies: some human rights campaigner­s had lost their accounts when their government­s asked Twitter to take them down. But while Mastodon feels safer, Roditi finds it less useful. “We want to be able to hijack hashtags and get material in front of people instantly,” she says. “But a big portion of the world is on Twitter. They’re not on Mastodon. It’s more limiting.”

Andrea Learned, the host of a climate podcast, has also found Mastodon too challengin­g. “I have been frustrated by how non-intuitive it is to make a list and follow other climate media,” she tells me over email. “We are all waiting for our various communitie­s (in my case #BikeTwitte­r , urbanists, #PlantBased) to ‘land’ some one place. So – we all dabble on several platforms and no big momentum is seen.”

‘The homeowners’ associatio­n of social media’

Mastodon may be more of a village than a global arena – but that doesn’t mean it’s always welcoming.

Johnathan Flowers, an assistant professor of philosophy at California

 ?? ?? Mastodon was designed to be resistant to takeovers by billionair­es. Photograph: NurPhoto/Rex/Shuttersto­ck
Mastodon was designed to be resistant to takeovers by billionair­es. Photograph: NurPhoto/Rex/Shuttersto­ck
 ?? Photograph: Mike Blake/Reuters ?? Elon Musk banned links to Mastodon on Twitter in December but later reversed course.
Photograph: Mike Blake/Reuters Elon Musk banned links to Mastodon on Twitter in December but later reversed course.

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