You don't have to let Mastodon become Twitter 2.0.

If you see certain people bringing bad habits, here are your options by order of severity:

1. DM them about social etiquette
2. Call out their bad behaviour
3. Block their account
4. Report bad behaviour to instance admins
5. Block their instance
6. Put their instance on Fediblock

Also remember: unlike birdsite, nobody is entitled to your attention!

@atomicpoet

0. Lead by example

Not everyone is malicious, just in a rut.

@breadbin @atomicpoet

Very much agree. I see this as an extension of the original point 1. Some are genuinely bad actors, of course, but for many it's simply a matter of unreflected habits and not bad intention.

If someone is known to me from the other site and I constructively point them to more cooperative ways of engaging, very often they are willing to try it out. I point them to other twitter migrants that have adopted mastodon conventions and they can see that it works.

@the_roamer @atomicpoet To tell you the truth I do not really know if I’m a good citizen or not yet. I’m just generally trying to be friendly, try to grasp the tech (ok got 20+ years of professional experience there, so cheating), and use the tools I have.

Hopefully I get better at it in time. Still haven’t made much use of lists and the likes for instance.

@breadbin @atomicpoet

I arrived here 3 weeks ago and spent lots of time on absorbing the mastodon conventions, working out how they play together to form a cooperative conversation culture.

It has been such an eye-opening experience --- suddenly I can use a "micro-blogging site" in a way that feels right, rather than having to fight the system.

Reminds me of the time, decades ago, when I switched to writing in TeX/Latex, rather than MS Word. Suddenly the tool fits the way want to use it.