Some quick notes on how we might build some of the essential infrastructure and governance processes that will be needed if #Mastodon is really going to be sustainable and viable as a mass-adoption social network (1/n):
a) We need to scale content moderation. A LOT. Corporate social network sites (SNS) do this by using armies of poorly paid, outsourced contractors. The #Fediverse should do it better. Perhaps by organizing a worker-owned content moderation cooperative?
a2) Smaller instances can self-moderate / use volunteer labor / whatever. But large instances will need to be able to scale, so a content mod coop (or a federated network of multiple such coops) that can be hired/contracted by larger instances would be amazing.
a3) Another option is for larger instances to hire more mods directly. Hopefully, some of the larger instances can themselves be organized as cooperaqtives. Probably some combination of in-house moderation & contracts w/coops would work well.
b) funding mechanisms. It is going to take money to scale. For hosting, development, ongoing improvements, #a11y, localization, UX improvements, security, and perhaps most of all, to pay content moderators just wages.
b2) currently, most of the money is in the form of small recurring donations to the german nonprofit that is the largest instance. every instance running its own patreon is part of the puzzle, but it probably can't be the whole thing.
b3) probably there will be a mix, with large donations from individuals, private foundations, and perhaps increasingly some state actors (for example, municipalities, libraries, state agencies, etc) providing contracts. There will also be some companies that want to donate (and contribute coding time, etc).
b4) All that money flowing in, mostly to the largest instances, ideally should be governed at least in part through participatory budgeting mechanisms. Alternately (or in addition), there should be formalized governance mechanisms (elections for the board of the mastodon non-profit? liquid democracy? sortition? stakeholder board members?) to truly democratize resource allocation.
c) Now that the 'don is taking off, from DIY small community to wider adoption, intentional bad actors are in the mix at scale. We will need to take this seriously, and invest HEAVILY in various approaches to minimizing harm, constantly working to block and limit bad actors, defederate the worst instances, and ... create our wildest dreams in terms of care, follow-up, and support for community members after troll attacks!
c2) we control the fediverse, not the market, the state, or the billionaires, not surveillance capitalism, not ad markets, so why would we limit our dreams of how to create community safety to content moderation alone? Let's dream bigger. We can create (and resource) new tools, implement shared banlists, provide resources for rapid response teams and after-attack processing support, and so much more!
(pause for now as I'm heading to a budget meeting, hope to return soon with more).
@schock I’d like to have a third party moderation services which can be contracted by any social media platform with tools to review content and take action to enforce community rules. Actions could be reversed with an appeal process. And I believe actions taken by humans could be used to train ML models to scale moderation. I’d also like to be able directly hire a “bot” which would handle moderation for me. It should also train an ML model. cc @cd24 @seb
@schock @cd24 @seb I also think governments could run their own official Mastodon services much like any .gov website is run. Large companies could also do this for their own accounts which provide customer service and marketing. Let them fund what they use. They can also fund their own moderation.
@brennansv @schock @cd24 @seb yes this! I keep pinging usds hoping they'll do this. A fair few govts in Germany are. https://vis.social/@nrchtct/109388940172606478
Marian Dörk (@[email protected])

@[email protected] @[email protected] the privacy commissioner of the state Baden-Württemberg is hosting an instance open only for state institutions: https://bawü.social/ there are also quite a few other instances referring to cities, regions and states, but they are often independently run: https://nrw.social https://berlin.social/ https://ruhr.social/ https://freiburg.social/

vis.social