Automattic is one of the most important companies on the Internet.

They make Tumblr, WooCommerce, Akismet, LongReads, WordPress—among others.

WordPress alone powers ~44% of the world's websites.

More interesting: despite being such a large, dominant company, few people hate Automattic.

Why is this? 🧵

Interesting facts about Automattic:

1. The FTC doesn't fine them
2. Congress doesn't demand answers from their CEO
3. No one wants to break them up
4. No Netflix documentaries have been made about them
5. No one has held them responsible for the destruction of society

They are so scandal-free, the average Joe doesn't even know they exist.

There's a few things Automattic does differently than Big Social:

1. They open source their flag ship product
2. They allow easy self-hosting
3. They allow easy customizations
4. Their core monetization isn't based on ads
5. They don't build abusive algorithmic feeds to maximize engagement

For the most part, Automattic is a good citizen.

So how well is Automattic doing compared to Meta and Twitter?

Well, there's no doubt that—at one time, Meta and Twitter had bigger valuations than Automattic.

But the flipside: Automattic will probably exist next year. Can we say the same about Meta and Twitter?

Big Social might have lots of capital, but I doubt they have Automattic's stability, sustainability, and survivability.

Why do I compare Automattic to Big Social? Because Automattic:

1. Builds social media products
2. Has achieved significant market share
3. Makes money

Whenever people ask me about a potential model for the Fediverse, I point to Automattic.

They're no flash in the pan. They've existed for ~20 years.

Most questions about the Fediverse's long term sustainability and survivability can be answered by looking at Automattic.

1. Does it scale? Yes.
2. Can it be extended and customized? Yes.
3. Can the non-technical average Joe be comfortable enough to self-host? Yes.
4. Can institutions embrace it? Yes.
5. Can an ecosystem be built around it? Yes.

The operating model has already been built and been proven long ago.

I get a lot of developers and entrepreneurs asking me for advice on a potential social media product.

Usually -- almost always -- I ask them: would you rather be Meta or Automattic?

At first, most of them think they want to be Meta. But then when I show them the stats on Automattic, many of them reconsider.

Sure, Meta attracts the Press.

Yet Automattic attracts good will and sustainability -- something Meta doesn't have.

Now to the question of, "How will this Fediverse thing make money?" -- because that's always the question.

Again, there's an easy answer:

1. Consulting
2. Customizations
3. Hosting
4. Support

In fact, there already is a few people making a living off the Fediverse as we speak.

And if Automattic can do it, so can WordPress, Pixelfed, Peertube, Lemmy -- all the projects and developers actively working on the Fediverse.

Another question regarding the Fediverse: "Would politicians, press, higher learning, celebrities actually ever be bothered to self-host an instance and pay someone to maintain it?"

Again, Automattic answers that question.

What do all those institutions use for their websites? Self-hosted WordPress sites.

Who runs it? Someone they pay.

Self-hosting and maintenance can not only be normalized -- people would probably be happy to do it.

Yesterday, I asked, "Is the Fediverse destined to be hijacked by a VC-driven Silicon Valley startup that re-hashes Big Social all over again?"

Nope -- it's not inevitable.

Again, Automattic has shown us that not only do alternative models exist, they're probably more sustainable.

To beat Big Social, we don't have to become Big Social.

It's entirely possible -- nay, probable -- to build the "WordPress of Social Media".

/END

@atomicpoet I just posted on this... I agree, but I'm trying to get clear in my head how to prevent "Big Social"?

@JoseMarichal I'll re-iterate, follow Automattic's model

1. Open source
2. Self-host
3. Build an eco-system for consulting, customizations, hosting and support

That's the recipe.

@atomicpoet @JoseMarichal I largely agree with everything said here, but self-hosting is currently not easy enough: relatively pricey if you go with a dedicated host, plus most ordinary people already sit on shared hosting spaces. Setting up WP through 1-click installers on shared hosts is trivial but no such thing for masto (yet).
Until we lower the barrier to entry, self-hosting will remain low, I suspect.
@eLearningTechie @atomicpoet @JoseMarichal Agreed. I spent an hour trying to install it and the components directly and flatly failed, went with the docker compose file and that still took some time and I had to learn how to setup postfix. It's nowhere near public-friendly for hosting yet
@chance @atomicpoet @JoseMarichal That was my impression, too, when I looked into it.
@eLearningTechie @JoseMarichal Actually, do you know that several webhosts offer easy 1-click Mastodon installation? Digital Ocean is an example.
@JoseMarichal @atomicpoet I think what it boils down to is one of (de)centralization. I mean, honestly it always has. When there's a central power then it's going to attract People Who Want Power. It doesn't matter if that's Twitter, Wordpress, Google, or a government. Sure you'll get some people who actually want the benefit the community vs acquire power, but you *will* get the vampires. Protocols and federation are the rising tide.
@ketmorco Hmm.. you've given me food for thought. Federation as a political concept is associated with both strengthening and weakening nation states. Weakening by taking power from the center (like Articles of Confederation vs. Federalism in the US). But strengthening by requiring coordination of activity rather than going solo, like Hayek arguing for the EU as a way to weaken the power of nation states... but in this case we're moving from centralized to "coordinated decentralization"....

@JoseMarichal Truth.

There are slight differences when we're talking about nation-states because often the outcome is who owns the finite resource that is the area of the Earth's crust.

I can't find the article right now but someone mentioned that the Internet created virtual land. And the virtual land is more or less infinite. So federation, done well, is *far* less intensive than "real world" federation, and migrating around the fediverse can be less painful.

@JoseMarichal I think that's a Very Good Thing. The easier it is to say, "No, thank you, I Do Not Want Your Ad-network", and move to a service where you're not the product, the better off we all are.

Ditto for being able to say, "I'm out." and removing your presence. Or alternatively, "You're out", and severing ties from actors you disagree with.

@JoseMarichal I'm pretty sure it's retro.social that has a policy that they will defederate from any corporate Mastodon instance. Which is awesome! I love that they have the ability to do that, as well as that if I wanted to spin up my own servers I could... not do that.

If I wanted.