• Federated alternatives are slowly building steam and people seem to have gotten pretty salty about corporate social media

    I think you’re overselling the importance of this one. When I’ve talked to friends about federated alternatives, they really aren’t interested. Even if they hated Twitter/reddit and think they’ve gotten worse, they just don’t really care about a federated alternative. I’ve heard some interest in threads, so maybe we count that?

      • If they really understood the phrase ‘too many cooks spoil the soup’, then they’d realize the advantage of smaller online communities.

        Reddit was at its best when it had a low count but engaged userbase, and became actively worse as it grew.

        I think this is because trolling and response isn’t a 1 to 1 ratio. All it takes is 1 toxic person to make an entire subforum rancid and takes the effort of several mods to mitigate it.

        The more people you have, the more chance you will have these trolls organize, the more likely they will either overwhelm or infiltrate the mods.

    • Regular people didn’t know or care wtf reddit was for quite a while also and there absolutely is a building friction between people and corporate social media. We’re in the early stages for now, but stuff like Activitypub is not going away.