@lauraritchie @actualham I've been popping back to Twitter from here (after initially popping back to here from Twitter), and realise I can see the difference clearly. Twitter is news radio for me, sometimes delivered by friends and fellow travellers. This is a conversation.
I am the least diligent person I know, and yet I keep coming back here.
@katebowles @actualham and it's different to commenting on a blog post- I was wondering about that... If I write a blog post I post it to FB, Twitter, & G+, but would I post it here? I think I might, but not to broadcast a topic, but with a genuine purpose for people to either enter into a conversation here or there. I would share, though, if there was a considered reason.
Is it about politeness and respect for people here? I think of posting to people & not to ether
@mahabali @actualham @lauraritchie @clhendricksbc This shocks me too -- that I come here without prompts, and despite having a complicated way of navigating in on mobile. I think it's the people we came in with, the space to talk and think, and the surprise dimension of the people we found here.
More and more I think forming our own federated instance will work. But that's real labour and cost for someone.
And the shared socio-ethical labour of figuring out how to sustain that thing.
@Triplefox @mahabali @daniellynds @actualham @lauraritchie @clhendricksbc A lot of this to me goes back to earlier cultures of e.g. channels and newsgroups, that has partly been refreshed by workplace collaboration tools like Slack. I think we're looking for the option of opening a pop-up conversation without either having to make a whole new community OR having to close off a private space.
Staying open to others feels really important, except where privacy is critical to safety.
@katebowles @mahabali @daniellynds @actualham @lauraritchie @clhendricksbc yes. it's some kind of mix of low friction entry and easy discovery and moderation, carefully considering everyone's incentives.
The reason why the moderated discussion persists is because it can act quickly, and the moderator bears implict obligation to spin up the discussion in an engaging way. However, left to their own devices users will choose a single venue and stay there forever.
@Triplefox @mahabali @daniellynds @actualham @lauraritchie @clhendricksbc A question for me: what enables the labour of moderation or dev work? What makes it possible to have or find the time?
In so many other sectors we're seeing volunteer work dry up as paid overwork takes up all human time. Where does this time to build or care for community come from? (This is about @Gargron's guitar: opportunity cost.)
@katebowles @Gargron @mahabali @daniellynds @actualham @lauraritchie @clhendricksbc In my experience the community strength isn't purely a function of mod action - they can simply improve the signal to noise and nudge the direction of conversation. Much more of it is derived through game-like systems design, of changing what you encounter when and the tools at hand to deal with it.
One answer: automating the most expensive elements of community into a "medium is the message" design philosophy.
@katebowles @Gargron @mahabali @daniellynds @actualham @lauraritchie @clhendricksbc that doesn't change the need to have active leadership, but in the same way that having zines or email made it more feasible to build community, i believe we can continue to find leveraging designs in the future, ones that exploit stigmergic qualities of community. (Heather Marsh has a whole book on this, Binding Chaos.)
At preseng we have a lot of systems that try to use voting and rating with unhumane results.