#Bluesky now allows you to “choose your own algorithm”.

Which sounds “incredible” and “sci-fi”—but it really isn’t.

What it essentially does is give a Twitter-like service Reddit-like features.

As an aside, now I’m wondering why Reddit doesn’t offer an alternative web front-end to make it more Twitter-like!

But how does this apply to the
#ActivityPub flavour of the #Fediverse? This feature now makes me realize how big a deal Fediverse groups are going to be, and if I were @Gargron, I’d be even more excited about rolling out Mastodon’s group functionality.

Because while groups aren’t exactly relevancy algorithms, once you add a “New”, “Hot”, “Best”, etc. feed to groups, now you’re in business.

I don’t know if choosing your own algorithm is the killer feature that Bluesky thinks it is. My experience is that most people hate choice. Nevertheless, I still thinks it’s important.

@[email protected]
If this is "choosing your own algorithm", #Calckey has actually had this feature long, long ago.

We call it "Antennas" -- and you can easily build an Antenna yourself.

Here's a screenshot for Antenna creation settings.
So I'm thinking about this in more detail, and I think the "choose your own algorithm" feature with #Bluesky is really not hard to implement, and something very doable on the #Fediverse.

What do we exactly want from an algorithm? Topics.

And we want topics sorted according to the following:

1. Hot
2. New
3. Top
4. Rising

Some people would like a "controversial" feed, but we don't have to give it to them
😉

As for "Top", we can sort it according to time parameters.
@atomicpoet How would you determine "Hot", "Top", "Rising"? Mastodon, and probably other implementations, don't federate likes. That may be true for reply counts too.
@Steve Bate It doesn't?

If I like a Mastodon toot on Hubzilla, my like can be seen on Mastodon. Vice versa, if someone on Mastodon likes one of my Hubzilla posts or comments, I can see it. And I'm pretty sure that all this doesn't only happen on the side of Hubzilla where ActivityPub is an optional add-on.
@jupiter_rowland For example, one of @atomicpoet recent posts currently has 19 likes and 9 boosts. It displays as 0/0 on my instance. I've read that Mastodon doesn't federate "likes" because it would be too easy to spoof and some users don't like exposing that data outside their local instance. I'll look for a reference.
@steve @[email protected] @[email protected] that is a true question, that I would like to be answered/solved.