I’m curious what you think about the self hosted AP server model nostr:npub108pv4cg5ag52nq082kd5leu9ffrn2gdg6g4xdwatn73y36uzplmq9uyev6

https://taalumot.space/writing/pirate-ship-social-media

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What this person describes is part of why I set up my own activity pub server to start with. I would have loved to use the "local" feed more But while I was running my instance, there was a general lack of interest from both real life and online friends.

*A new navy!

Sorry, but what's this guy going to do when his pirate ship gets blocked "from port" by other Mastodon instances?

People are naturally tribal. Leaders are integral to the ActivityPub model, in which people accumulate around charismatic admins. It's not really a centralizing factor as long as people can move between servers (they can't really on ActivityPub; you can murder your whole ship).

It's interesting how people talk about Mastodon admins being worse than Big Tech jannies. Usually they are, but it's not an inherent flaw in human nature or anything, it's just that Mastodon as a project attracts people who are childish, narcissistic, and dramatic. It's totally possible to be a balanced and reasonable admin, although it gets harder as the community grows. Which brings me to the next problem of Mastodon being maximalist software architecture. It's great for sites like Truth Social who can throw money at the problem to scale, and terrible for sites with 10 users because they can't afford to keep hosting it.

But we have to recognize the ways in which the model helped the Fediverse explode. Which is why I'm trying to strike a balance with Ditto. Mastodon's community model on top of a network where users aren't held captive.

Users feel more comfortable using tech that is supported by a faceless company. Moreso than tech that is supported by Some Guy.

The ambiguity of server rules being dictated by what that guy ate that morning just sucks. Companies have policies, user protections, etc