I wrote about Mastodon the other day. Here's the piece I wrote on ZDNet :
http://www.zdnet.com/article/is-mastodon-the-new-social-media-star-or-imploding-black-hole/

I'm impressed with its growth and stability so far. I'll be watching closely as brands try to work out how to monetize this new audience

@eileenb As @woozle noted, when epistemic (media) systems gain significance, the attract attention:

"Because of a high percentage of the population being present, there is now substantial power to be had by influencing the discussions that take place."

Or more accurately: as there are /returns/ to influencing an audience, those influencers will appear: direct & brand marketing, propagandists, polemicists.

So yes, the brands ... will come, like it or not.

https://redd.it/5wg0hp

@woozle @eileenb I see a fairly common progression of interests within a new media channel. Not necessarily in the following order, but close:

1. Technicians -- "shop talk"
2. Artistics and creatives, avant garde.
3. Organisations for internal use: business, government, academia, religion, etc.
4. External comms, management, monitoring, discussion.
5. Direct marketing.
6. Mass entertainment.
7. Mass marketing.
8. Propaganda and polemicists.

Merely changing platforms changes nothing.

@dredmorbius @woozle @eileenb unless the medium itself has functions which combat or repel certain elements. For example the avant garde can't stand Nazis. And an instance full of brands may be regarded as spam. Corporations have very little say in open-source spaces.

@will Sure, but it also depends on those elements' capacities to change the rules themselves.

Bob Dylan: "Money doesn't shout, it swears."

Informational activities which are subsidised by, or reward, financial interests, or political interests, have a capacity to dominate pretty much anything else. Epistemic systems whose incentivisation is /anything but/ seeking deeper truth ... will return that, and /not/ truth.

RAW: Celine's 2nd law.

@woozle @eileenb

@dredmorbius @woozle @eileenb but like, if I run my own email server with me and 100 of my friends, and #brands are annoying, I'll just add them to my spam filter, ya know? This is a semi-solved problem.

The key, as usual, is for spammers to act like they're not spammy so people don't ignore/block/unfollow them. But by giving the power of instance creation to people, there's always an escape chute.

@will Check your priors: /if/ you run your own email server:

* You can afford a server. OK, falling bar, Raspberry Pi, $5, falling 10x per decade
* You can afford a broadband connection. Not ... too unreasonable
* Persistant network connection and address. This is a complexity bar
* Systems administration. Now we're at 5-8% of the population or less. Likely /much/ less. (OECD computer skills survey)
* Systems security
* Spam and abuse
* Content liability

Who can do this?

@dredmorbius @will
Is the bar "who can run an email server" or "who can run an email server that isn't shitty, insecure, and bound to become a spampot"?

Because in the former case, only the first three points count. (I.e., anybody with $5 and a broadband connection can run their own whatever server.)

@will @dredmorbius
In other words, by far the largest bar against people running their own servers is that even technically-inclined people vastly overestimate the difficulty of running your own server for whatever purpose.

This is because it's trendy in tech circles to think about scalability even when it doesn't matter. (You can run a mail server off a 386. There is no scale problem if you aren't google.)