The Dutch government has officially launched their own Mastodon server, State Secretary of Digitalisation @avhuffelen announced today! The server lives on the official domain of the Dutch government, at social.overheid.nl.

The Secretary mentions in her announcement a letter to the government explaining her support for 'value-driven alternative social networks', such as Mastodon. For more information on that, check out
https://fediversereport.com/dutch-government-officially-launches-mastodon-server/

Dutch government officially launches Mastodon server

The Dutch government has officially launched their own Mastodon server. In an accompanying letter, the State Secretary explains how this relates to the government strategy of supporting digital common goods.

fediversereport.com
@fediversereport @avhuffelen
Love it:
“[…] the fire department send out an emergency text warning to people, urging them to check Twitter for the latest updates. However, this coincided with Twitter preventing people who do not have accounts from viewing tweets, resulting in people not being able to see emergency service updates. The House filed a motion in response, stating that emergency situations, the government should make sure that information is publicly accessible.
@Brendanjones @fediversereport @avhuffelen that's just the plain lack of understanding on how the internet works. "see my updates on twitter" really means "twitter decides what to show you, it might play nice and show you my update, but it doesn't have to"
@marcorobotics @fediversereport @avhuffelen I’m not sure what you’re trying to say. They decided that information needed to be publicly accessible for exactly the reason you say - government messages shouldn’t be reliant on private companies playing nice.
@Brendanjones @fediversereport @avhuffelen I think people are only now realizing that twitter may or may not publish your messages, but fundamentally they should have known that's the way it's always been. It's the same for most services these days, and it's so sad to see how centralized the internet has become over the years.