In a new blog post, @imanijoy provides a deeper dive into the design process for Collections, and explains what we’ve included (and things that are left out) for the first release. We’ll be enabling this feature on mastodon.social next week, and rolling it out more widely in Mastodon 4.6 very soon. We’re excited to hear what you think!
https://blog.joinmastodon.org/2026/04/designing-collections/
My one request is to keep my profile out of a collection - full stop. I do not want anyone to be able to add me. It is private for a reason. Bluesky does not have private profiles and being added to a collection or 'starter pack' there is a nightmare. My profile is set to approve followers and I do not want to have to deal with unwanted requests because I was added to a collection. Thanks!
This appears to have been considered, but I want to see it clearly in my settings.
"My one request is to keep my profile out of a collection - full stop. I do not want anyone to be able to add me."
I second this
Will there be a clear and immediate way to opt out of this new Mastodon "Feature"?
The Mastodon obsession with onboarding massive numbers of newcomers as quickly as possible is pretty...
...undignified
Exactly how fast and how large does @Mastodon dot Social -- currently at some 288,028 Active Users -- need to grow?
And no, please stop
This is about Masto Social growth
The official party line that this is for all Mastodon instances anywhere is put to lie by following the comments / discussions at Mastodon Github -- particularly those discussions that are silenced as violations of the Github TOA by the official Hall Monitor
Where does it all end?
Anywhere?
Who decided Mastodon needs to conquer the entire "Fediverse"?
This isn't about onboarding as many users as quickly as possible, but rather giving a better onboarding experience to users who do find us. Retention and a better user experience, not acquisition at all costs. Thanks!
@imanijoy @FinchHaven @Mastodon
Agree. When I started on bluesky, the starter packs were helpful to find people. Keep in mind, bluesky has a lot more public users. For example, reporters & publications. The user base here is smaller and spread across instances. This feature makes sense for public type of profiles - like reporters. But for individuals like me, it makes no sense to put them in a collection. However, bsky has lists so you don't have to follow every account. So much easier.