I think that slow and steady growth is actually a positive. I’d argue that the key part to focus on right now is sustainability. This involves having enough devs to work on the platforms, enough people who are willing to host them, and enough users to produce content. Once these three criteria are met, then the platform will stick around indefinitely. This is a very different dynamic from commercial platforms that need to find ways to monetize and grow to stay viable.
Mastodon now has millions of users, and now there are a bunch of other compatible platforms like Pleroma that all work on the same protocol and interop with each other. It’s very much in the real of being indefinitely sustainable in my opinion. Even Lemmy with hundreds of thousands of users has likely passed the threshold at this point. So, I’m not too worried about rapid growth as an aspect of viability for the fediverse.
Meanwhile, the slow trickle of users means that new people end up adapting to the existing culture, and this is an important feature in my opinion. When you have a stampede of people come in from the mainstream, they bring the mainstream culture along with them and their views become dominant. We already saw this happening to an extent on the popular Lemmy instances after the Reddit migration.
I expect that we’ll continue seeing more and more incidents happening on commercial platforms as they crackdown on political speech, and we’ll be seeing more and more waves of people join the fediverse. And the bigger fediverse gets the more attractive it becomes since there’s increasingly more content available.
TLDR here is that we shouldn’t worry too much about rapid growth, and instead focus on making sure things are sustainable. The growth will happen organically over time.
Mastodon is definitely growing, and I see it from personal usage that it got a lot more lively over the past year. I think there’s always going to be this ebb and flow dynamic happening where we get a wave of new users. Things get really lively for a while, than a lot of users become inactive, and things get quieter again. The dynamic does cause some intermittent issues, but the platforms do become increasingly more robust over time as well. For example, Lemmy was having all kinds of issues handling new waves initially, and over the past year it got a lot more stable. Personally, I’m pretty optimistic with the way things are progressing.
And a couple of articles showing how much growth happened recently:
deleted by creator
I think that slow and steady growth is actually a positive. I’d argue that the key part to focus on right now is sustainability. This involves having enough devs to work on the platforms, enough people who are willing to host them, and enough users to produce content. Once these three criteria are met, then the platform will stick around indefinitely. This is a very different dynamic from commercial platforms that need to find ways to monetize and grow to stay viable.
Mastodon now has millions of users, and now there are a bunch of other compatible platforms like Pleroma that all work on the same protocol and interop with each other. It’s very much in the real of being indefinitely sustainable in my opinion. Even Lemmy with hundreds of thousands of users has likely passed the threshold at this point. So, I’m not too worried about rapid growth as an aspect of viability for the fediverse.
Meanwhile, the slow trickle of users means that new people end up adapting to the existing culture, and this is an important feature in my opinion. When you have a stampede of people come in from the mainstream, they bring the mainstream culture along with them and their views become dominant. We already saw this happening to an extent on the popular Lemmy instances after the Reddit migration.
I expect that we’ll continue seeing more and more incidents happening on commercial platforms as they crackdown on political speech, and we’ll be seeing more and more waves of people join the fediverse. And the bigger fediverse gets the more attractive it becomes since there’s increasingly more content available.
TLDR here is that we shouldn’t worry too much about rapid growth, and instead focus on making sure things are sustainable. The growth will happen organically over time.
deleted by creator
Mastodon is definitely growing, and I see it from personal usage that it got a lot more lively over the past year. I think there’s always going to be this ebb and flow dynamic happening where we get a wave of new users. Things get really lively for a while, than a lot of users become inactive, and things get quieter again. The dynamic does cause some intermittent issues, but the platforms do become increasingly more robust over time as well. For example, Lemmy was having all kinds of issues handling new waves initially, and over the past year it got a lot more stable. Personally, I’m pretty optimistic with the way things are progressing.
And a couple of articles showing how much growth happened recently:
deleted by creator