Okay, so some observations after a week of social media turmoil:

- A LOT of #LawTwitter people (including a fair number of law profs) migrated to Bluesky last weekend.

- It appears that many of them already had invite codes but didn't use them until Twitter melted down (again).

- Related: At least one of my friends noted that during the last Great Migration (November) they weren't really sure Twitter would implode, so they weren't ready to jump (or fully jump) quite yet

- To my mind, the last point means that what we saw in some quarters wasn't so much a rejection of the fedi as much as a timing/perception issue

- So, depending on what happens over there in the future, those people may ultimately be persuadable to try the fedi (or try it again)

- But, for now, the mass of people over there creates an undeniable gravitational pull for law people

- To be clear: I still believe in the fedi and strongly prefer Mastodon to Bluesky as a platform

- But I think it's worth thinking about why people are making the choices they are making now

- To that end, I haven't seen any law friends saying that search or quoting are what make them prefer Bluesky.

- Instead, I've heard more about timing (see above) and perceived difficulty of onboarding.

- I've also seem comments to the effect that some people just want a place where they can scroll a bit and find interesting content, without taking the time/energy to build up a follow list. No judgment here; just observing the different preferences

@design_law In my experience people instantly check out once you try to start explaining the concept of “multiple servers” to them. Even if you use an eMail analogy or whatever, they find it way too complex. That’s why I would recommend that they should just select mastodon.social and all go there and pretend like “that is Mastodon”. They can always learn about the details later and move if they ever wanted to, but they don’t need to be burdened with all of that up front.
@hachre Yeah, I think that's right