@jdp @Navertal Interesting, so you're both saying that the two platforms "mean" different things to you?
That makes sense to me. At the same time, I feel this should ALL go to mastodon in the long run, if only because the tech is obviously better. (decentralization matters)
I wonder if this desire for separate "modes" might be satisfied once we can define complex "sub-communities" or "fora" in masto. E.g. this thread: https://social.coop/@bmann/105646086938187583
@srs @jdp I'd say it's more a function of the size and shape of the community than the platform itself. Twitter’s sheer size makes it more “scene-y” than “community-ish” - more activity driven by social current, lower ratio of response-to-likes (I think) - so certain behaviors make more sense there. Here I scan my feed with more interest in writing responses.
Overlaps of interest with mutuals also affect what I say on which platform - my meditation posts all go to Twitter, for instance.
@srs @jdp But there are also ways that technical differences affect the platforms. Celebrities/influencers are able to amass more followers on Twitter, I think, than they ever could on here, partly due to the feed algorithms and trend summaries. I like that Mastodon isn't an engagement machine, but it may also cap size/slow growth.
Social infrastructure is weird - it's interesting to think about the different effects of construction and social milieu on the growing popularity of a platform.
@srs @jdp Oh, another thought! It's interesting to take Signal's sudden adoption boom as a case study in FLOSS adoption and consider its similarities and differences with a platform like Mastodon.
Signal was elevated by preparation and opportunity - good UI and a stable community of dedicated users meets mass disillusionment with WhatsApp. This is/was the time for Mastodon, but setup isn't as simple and social media platforms have more of a "who's on there?" problem than messaging apps.
@Navertal @jdp oh this *is* interesting! It seems that network effects are different among the two types of apps: for messengers, I can easily use several along each other, but for microblogs - much less so.
Relatedly, existing group chats seem to be the main reason why people stay with WhatsApp - or have always used Signal
@srs Acting as a Schelling point for weirdos :D Trick is to scratch an itch that can’t be reached by a person’s existing communities, and I think our appropriately named server is getting its legs there. There’s a difference in tone and content between the feed I have on here and on Twitter and I find myself preferring one over the other for certain things.