This piece on Wired about Black Twitter is worth your time. It's something I've been thinking about a lot, about how uneven a migration to a new space ends up being.

It also is one thing I'm eyeing about Mastodon. There's a danger that servers become silos if we aren't intentional. If you listen to some of the Black scholars in my field, they are saying as much. Twitter makes their work visible across groups.

So how do we federate for inclusion? It will be a challenge.

https://www.wired.com/story/black-twitter-elon-musk/

There Is No Replacement for Black Twitter

A series of missteps by Elon Musk has called the fate of the platform’s cultural engine into question.

WIRED

@JeremyLittau

I think this attitudinal shift is necessary. We (all of us) need to *build* the Fediverse, not just inhabit it. That may require initiating conversations and forging alliances between users and technicians that proprietary systems (in the name of convenience but in the service of control) put up barriers to prevent.

https://social.coop/@baslow/109376864938026067

(((Baslow))) (@[email protected])

#TwitterMigration You are no longer consumers of a social media platform's services. You are members of a networked, nested community and, as such, have shouldered the obligations of citizens of that community and the communities with which it communicates. Those obligations are more or less formalized, more or less fluid, depending on your particular situation but you must work to learn them, help shape them, abide by and enforce them...or start a new community. #SeizeTheMeansOfCommunity

social.coop
@baslow @JeremyLittau I’m not sure we should “build it”. It’s been operating for years and millions just moved in and took it over. We need to keep that in mind. I don’t mind inhabiting it for a while to learn about it and then contribute. But we must keep in mind people have been here for a long time and we the newcomers should respect that… though it will probably never be the same.
@ProfBatGirl @JeremyLittau
In the Fediverse, "building it" means imagining and proliferating alternatives, not tearing down existing structures. I am, e.g., imagining platforms with robust collaboration, deliberation, copresence and scheduling tools with strong Federation available where appropriate but a wide enough variety of modes of internal interaction that much richer senses of community can be forged.
I'm talking about supplementing Mastodon , et. al.