Did the Mastodon web-UI stop showing you if someone is following you?
Did the Mastodon web-UI stop showing you if someone is following you?
I have seen a number of people create read-only Telegram channels — that they post to, and their audience only reads from, and can comment to their posts.
It feels a lot like a micro-blogging profile.
Except that the presentation is different —
• Telegram doesn't have a concept of a home-feed, that would mix posts from different channels together,
• instead, the channel is a unit, and you see which channels have new posts (and how many are unread by you).
What features people would like to see in the Misskey client?
Let @syuilo know.
This has been asked for on the (broader) Fediverse for a long time, too.
(Longer than Threads has existed.)
Although, in practice, it is impossible to prevent it. Someone can take a screenshot of your post and comment on it — thus doing an ad hoc DIY quote-post.
I wish @Tusky had a "mentions" feed similar to Fedilab.
I.e., a screen (in the app) that only shows posts that "mention" me.
I get so many other non-mention notifications that I can (and at times often do) miss posts that mention me.
What about the Fediverse or Mastodon, etc, frustrates you or confuses you?
I think this likely applies to the Fediverse, too.
Although, I don't think every social-media user it trying to gain and grow an audience. I think some people are just trying to make find friends or people with similar interests who are mutuals.
I think what @light wants is a Fediverse Custom Feed (rather than a List).
RE: https://mastodon.social/@light@noc.social/114162333801375136
When you press that button (in the screenshot), and publish a post on the Fediverse —
For most users on the Fediverse —
Not only are you publishing that post on your host's website, but —
YOU ARE PUSHING that post to people and machines (including strangers) across the Fediverse.
If you do not want that to happen, then — don't press that button.
Instead, consider a private message, or using something such as Signal.
This is one of the problems with centralized social-media — that your entire online existence and self can be deleted, and often, there is nothing you can do about it
That you can be unpersoned.
On the Fediverse (and other decentralized social-media (DeSo)) — you can protect yourself from this. You can self-host, and own and control your online identity & online self.
RE: https://twitter.com/SwittCraft/status/1895119128509456401
I want to be able to write long-form articles using whatever text-editor I choose to use, editing a file, and using git
Not everyone will want to create long-form content this way — but I want to create long-form content this way
Also I don't just want to put the long-form content on some web-site, and post the URL from my Mastodon account
I want the long-form content to be a first-class ActivityStreams / ActivityPub object. An "Article" or a "Note" if I have to
An article on what Tumblr was like as a technology and a culture. With a focus on GIF-sets.
https://cybercultural.com/p/tumblr-2012/
by @ricmac
"The emphasis [of Tumblr] was on fun and sharing, rather than writing and editing."
I noticed years ago that some people use Discord as an alternative to what was traditionally done with mailing-lists.
To keep a list of people. Maybe for a community. Many for an audience. And to be able to communicate with them.
Both people and businesses created these.
I see some people doing similar with Telegram.
Sometimes, with read-only Telegram channels. Although sometimes with everyone posting.
4/
Having said that —
There is a new UI trend to make the displaying of hash-tags more pleasant. Many clients (especially Mastodon clients) are putting hash-tags at the bottom of the post and limiting the space they take up.
That isn't (yet) true for group actors.
3/
But —
Even if you follow a hash-tag, you don't necessarily see all the posts on the Fediverse that mentioned it.
Where, if you follow a Group Actor, you will see all (new) posts that mention it.
2/
For example —
I don't have to do anything to create a hash-tag. I just start using it.
Where, with a Group Actor, not only do I have to explicitly create it before hand, but — it is usually a multi-step process.
1/
Hash-Tags versus Group Actors
Hash-Tags and Group Actors seems to serve similar purposes.
("Communities" in Lemmy are Group Actors.)
I.e., a "place" where many people can post stuff — on a single topic, for a community, etc.
But at least currently, the user-experience (UX) is different.
9/
And just for the record —
Just like everyone else I contacted about their 'discoverable' flag being defaulted to 'false' —
He wasn't aware of the 'discoverable' flag existing (just like everyone else I contacted).
He didn't want to be hidden (just like everyone else I contacted).
He changed it to 'true' (just like everyone else I contacted).
8/
As it is now, I think the 'discoverable' flag is broken.
And, I think the whole user-experience (UX) around the 'discoverable' flag is poor.
And, I think Fediverse software treating a 'false' value for 'discoverable' as "not discoverable" (rather than "not discoverable" or "no choice made") has hugely negative consequences for the user-experience (UX) of the Fediverse