Show newer

Oh nice! Looks like cohost has added RSS/Atom feed for every page. Pretty useful if you wanna follow people who migrated there from outside the site.
cohost.org/jkap/post/654275-no

#Cohost #RSS

Mastodon sure feels like the dog catching the car right about now. Democratizing real power in a hurry is always fucking ugly.

Beginning this thread, I struggled as I often do with where to start, and fell more than a bit short here. I should expand on why this followed from my advocacy for sensible trustful systems as a both dialectical and striving pursuit. I am neither for eliminating, nor maximizing, trust in any given system, but putting it where it works best to render sustainable patterns of humanist outcomes. Hopefully I'll have more time to write later today.

Show thread

There has been lots of neat new work in the area of anonymous communications (mixnets/MPC/PIR), so much so that I’m struggling to get a feel for the state of the art. Does anyone have any very recent surveys or blog posts about new crypto work?

Like, it's obvious that figures like Q/uanta Boy and initiatives like Bluesky are pushing systems designed to destroy community moderation power in response to its lamentable excesses (in favor of chaos and authority, respectively), and they take advantage of a strong and abiding individualism (read: competitive ideology, essentially, capitalism) that even few committed anarchists I know have openly endeavored or transparently sought to eradicate from their rhetoric, analyses, or attitudes.

Show thread

Small communities take advantage of, and encourage to build, the sort of real material (or at least impactfully social) connection that improves human behavior, and maximize our responsibility for each other, instead of diffusing or delegating that responsibility so deeply that anyone can use their common sense to dismiss any individual's relation to it. It is easy to reject no-trust concepts the right wing proposes because they resemble ill-fated crypto asset marketing, but we must go farther.

Show thread

To clarify the very beginning of the thread, I should say that we need to build systems that support reasonable degrees of trust. It is meaningless to "trust" a centralized moderation team with anything more than a reactive relationship with any given user on a huge platform they're tasked with managing, just like it is meaningless to "trust" a no-[human-]trust system to arbitrate every individual user's needs adequately to a cohesive whole. *Small* communities account for most such problems.

Show thread

So, the distinction would arise where flippantly, toxically pro-defederating behavior -- often jettisoning context, overstating associations, summarily characterizing people, even crafting specious connections that deliberately preserve conflict and political goal orientation through potential resolution points -- endeavors to spread itself as broadly as possible using public moderation collaboration tools like # fediblock. Its power translates well; you can take the Poster out of Twitter, but…

Show thread

This makes no implications of instances with moderation regimes that fit their own particular needs, or see themselves as networking differently; every instance needn't seek the most connectivity possible. There is every reason to maintain a portion of the network that is defederated with mastodon .social, the largest instance, because maximal connection is not even desirable to many people with every right to use AP how they want. It's just a collective material requirement to improve the net.

Show thread

If an instance has got fifty people on it who interact a lot with each other, and one of them is a miserable piece of shit, well, if the instance doesn't repel them, it's a lot easier to see 50 people having personal responsibility for failing to consider the behavior of a member they almost certainly know, than it would be to hold 5,000 or 50,000 people responsible (blocked and inaccessible to your users) for the moderation team's decisions about a person they may never have any connection to.

Show thread

If your instances become so large that it's impossible to hold everyone on the instance responsible for one member's behavior (so, probably literally anything more than a couple hundred users max, unless you build an impressive participatory governance), you will end up with torches out for moderation because pretty much any outcome will result in at least some people being held responsible for someone they simply cannot be expected to build and leverage corrective social structures towards.

Show thread

I'm generally against no-trust systems, as an ideological pursuit, but building your systems toward outcomes that would otherwise be reliant on good individual behavior can get a lot of important things done with minimal risk or imposition. This is why I feel large instances are unsustainable on this platform. Sharing an instance with another person -- anyone -- means sharing liability for that person with all the other users. It's not just about moderation; instance blocks silence everyone.

@moderation It is all of our responsibility to reject knee-jerk association politics now before it prematurely destroys this platform.

Let nothing I say be misconstrued for any defense of some distant, typically-mediocre, flippantly racist white actor whose additional account Kolektiva promptly froze pending further investigation, and which they've said absolutely nothing to defend, either.

Show thread

Big shouts to @moderation maintaining a principled professionalism and critical transparency in the face of seemingly incessant bad-faith solidarity-destroying opportunistic behavior flying in all directions. It's not easy to make thorough and sustainable decisions in a space now jammed with people used to operating with the cynicism seemingly required to obtain results with a central authority deeply uninterested in the actual details of an event.

My tool for making a simple, searchable, themeable archive of your public tweets and threads is now live:

tinysubversions.com/twitter-ar

The tool runs entirely on your computer, in your browser. None of your data is uploaded anywhere in the process. The output is a zip file of a basic HTML website that you can upload to a web host if you choose.

The site also answers most of the common questions I get. Please read it first before asking me questions here!

Show thread

Just weeks into the influx, # Fediblock is already railroading people through chains of association politics… as much as I wish I could just block the hashtag we should all be persistently aware of how miserable the situation will become if we don't get over ourselves and commit to building solidarity community right now. We should take responsibility right now, to the best of our ability, and advantage—maybe not always engaging those particular horrors themselves, but building better at home.

You can't even post a linktree to twitter anymore 😂🤣🤣 that website is toast

I keep procrastinating rebuilding the lunchboxes and it ends now! Live at 10pm. twitch.tv/bobbyd0g

I keep seeing that “first they came for the journalists” sign, and it pisses me off so much, because when they came for muslims, immigrants, and trans people, mainstream journalists normalized it and reported it as “both sides”. Somehow it didn’t count for them until it was happening to them personally, which is *exactly* what the fucking poem was warning against in the first place.

Show older
Hellsite

The hell site