I was reading this post by Alyssa Rosenzweig and found it to be a very enjoyable read.

https://rosenzweig.io/blog/the-federation-fallacy.html

Rosenzweig tells us that although we have created federated social media, we should expect them to centralize. That is what has happened to email and empirical data demonstrates that this is happening for mastodon as well.

To be clear, this post was made in march 2019 and I am not aware whether she has changed her opinion. The current state of decentralization within the mastodon ecosystem may also have changed.

I will challenge the statement that email and mastodon has an equal potential to decentralize the web. Which is not explicitly said in the post, but which I feel is a sentiment.

I will talk about mastodon here for the sake of making the talk less abstract. This text will be applicable to other fediverse social infrastructures as well.

Introduction

We like to compare email and mastodon to showcase the flexibility that is lacking in centralized social media. This comparison is valuable because it makes these concepts much more understandable for newcomers.

However, treating email and mastodon as equal forces in the fight for decentralization is inappropriate.

Differences between email and mastodon

It is important to emphasize a core difference between email and mastodon.

The community element. Although email and mastodon are federated and decentralized, email doesn’t have a community element. Email only connects you to those you follow whereas mastodon is designed to connect you to your community and your federation.

How easy it is to self host is the selfhostability. Is it easy to install? Is it resource demanding? Is it possible to pay others to run the service? The better the selfhostability, the more people will be able to do it. It is essential for the decentralization potential.

Different mentalities

There are two mentalities. The globalization mentality and the community mentality.

Those with a globalization mentality view an instance just like an email provider. They want to subscribe to exactly the users they are interested in and that’s it. The community element doesn’t really matter to them because they don’t join an instance based on a theme. They could perhaps be interested in mastodon.social or mas.to.

Those with a community mentality will seek instances based on the community element of an instance. Those with a community mentality are more likely to subscribe to instances with strong themes. They could perhaps be interested in gensokyo.social, dolphin.town or meow.social.

Understanding the decentralization potential

To understand the decentralization potential for each of these solutions, we need to understand:

  • who will feel compelled to host the solution.
  • how will users elect their providers.

By doing this, we can determine the decentralization potential.

Email user

The email user has a globalization mentality and will judge an email provider by pricing, security and other technical criterias. Nobody choose email provider based on community.

Centralized actors has a much greater advantage of hosting when they only needs to focus on the technical aspects. They can push the prices down and all their spending can easily be advertised. Low risk, high reward.

The selfhostability of email is a technical nightmare or from what I’ve heard. You gain autonomy, but there is low community reward. High risk, low reward.

Based on this analysis, we should expect users to flock to centralized solutions.

Mastodon user

If the mastodon user has a globalization mentality, the users are most attracted to big instances. They have most likely been active on twitter and just interested in a replacement rather than actual structural change. Perhaps they view bigger instances as more sustainable. They are disinterested in thematic instances because that would arbitrarily limit speech.

If the mastodon user has a community mentality they will gravitate towards instances with a strong local or federated culture. They believe that as instances grows big, it stops being an interconnected community. They value small and thematic and value good moderation.

Mastodon can be very risky for centralized actors as it requires involvement in the community. Often times it can come at shareholders, electorate or userbase expense. We can see this all the time with various mastodon.social, twitter and facebook contraversies. It can conceivably be done right and in that case, the rewards could be great. But definitely not ideal for all centralized actors. High risk, variable reward.

How is mastodon’s selfhostability? You can allow others to run your instance through Masto Host or Spacebear Federation. And the code is designed to be easy to install. If operating systems such as yunohost properly supports the mastodon app, this will also increase the selfhostability.

So will Mastodon be a force for decentralization?

Mastodon could easily become centralized if enough people have the globalization mentality and selfhosting remains unaccessable/unused. Corporate actors can easily capitalize on the globalization mentality.

On the other side… If we can shape the masses into having community mentalities. If we can shape development to improve selfhostability. If we can create enthusiasm for digital freedom on the ground. The future will be decentralized.

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