The collapse of Twitter is a system breakdown. Mastodon and the fediverse represent something different: _system change_. From for-profit "Big Tech" to nonprofit, open source, community-owned public spaces.

System change is always harder than you think. It always incurs short-term costs, with hoped for long-term benefits.

The next few weeks will be really tough for the fediverse. Stick around, vibe with it, and you just might help us put a huge part of the web back in community hands. <3

Expect some of the following to happen in the coming weeks:

- celebrities with huge follower counts pushing tiny community-run servers to their knees

- instance admin burnout; shutting down of servers

- big new servers that don't "vibe" with common rules or culture being widely defederated

- some notable account violating an instance code of conduct and throwing a fit

- lots of people ragequitting Mastodon for one reason or another

- etc.

It'll be a rough ride. Patience and strength, all.

@eloquence with celebrities I would contact their management, explain Mastodon make them set up their own servers?
@SebastienK @eloquence Yes, that's a good idea. One German TV celeb used his production company to set up their own community server - just look at the stats: https://the-federation.info/node/det.social
@SebastienK @eloquence - if a celebrity set up his/her own server, they could establish and stringently enforce their own rules. It could also be a guard against celeb impersonation. Sounds much safer for them than Twitter.
@SebastienK @eloquence
That would be the ideal, yeah. It's probably the best way to let them "verify and protect their identity", *and* it prevents people from flooding a specific instance that one of them is on. It also implicitly promotes the idea of federation.
@Kichae yup, it feels like a no brainer. A win win for fediverse and the artist as they get to set their own rules. @eloquence