Do all of these look accurate? Particularly curious about Blue Sky since I don't know it that well.
Discussion
What's the difference between "de-platformed" and "silenced at will"?
de-platformed meaning banned and lose all your followers etc...
silenced meaning someone can stop your word from going out
Twitter has some Linux alternative clients according to https://www.tecmint.com/best-linux-twitter-clients/
Interesting. I guess there are other for other OSes too, didn't know this.
Bluesky is a bit off.
Own your readership - what does this mean?
Can be deplatformed - Not once they launch federation, which is very soon.
Control what you see - default view is chronological, like nostr. There are tons of custom algos, complete freedom. Best implementation of custom algorithms on any platform, wish nostr took this route.
Ads - no ads
Multiple clients - I’m aware of at least 4 fully functional Bluesky clients. 3 of them are as polished and feature-rich as the best nostr clients, if not better.
Can be silenced at will - huh? Like, account deleted?
audience relationship meaning your followers stay with you
thanks for the rest. Good to know.
Silenced - meaning someone can moderate away your notes
In regards to being silenced, that’s also an ability that will be up to each individual server once federation happens.
you can also already have non-bluesky usernames using ./well-known or dns entries on your own domain.
Yep! I was one of the very first accounts to have it. I’m there as @evan.best
what does this mean for my chart? ;)
Doesn't feel accurate to me for a simple reason : it compares oranges with apples.
Mastodon, X, FB, you name it, are platforms. Nostr being a protocol it would be more relevant to compare it with something like activitypub in my opinion
Bluesky has multiple clients. For example, this is the one I use: https://graysky.app/
The rest is a bit matter of definition. If you consider that it’s a protocol then you can be only kicked out of an instance but you still have your social graph, posts etc.