I see a lot of the drama that is happening between people of color on the platform and the mastodon dev team.
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Tim Brayreplied to your auntifa liza ๐ต๐ท ๐ฆ ๐ฆฆ on last edited by
@blogdiva @polotek Our tech stack is 100% boring/vanilla. Our co-op structure is off-the-shelf boring, taking mostly just the defaults for our legal jurisdiction. The only thing thatโs innovative is the combo: co-op owned instance. Observation: Requiring membership approval and a $50 payment is *amazingly* effective at discouraging griefers.
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How about starting with code and participating in standards bodies meetings?
It's #FreeSoftware and #OpenStandards!
Even if the mastodon "gods" don't like something, absolutely everything is in your power to get organized and do something about it.
Don't tell me anyone needs an external power to force the whiteys (like me) to do something.
Because you don't!
That's the proprietary mindset.
Please come and join the free world, you're welcome!
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your auntifa liza ๐ต๐ท ๐ฆ ๐ฆฆreplied to Marco Rogers on last edited by
@polotek @timbray i know you're being facetious, but there is a tech nut to crack in turning digital production, including social media activity, into a form of payment. it shouldn't be taken lightly by the fediverse if we're going to deal with sustainability beyond how much currency (fiat and otherwise) a project gets to accumulate on a monthly basis.
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Marco Rogersreplied to Marco Rogers on last edited by
I cannot stress enough that the problems we are discussing are not technical problems. They are people problems. I know many people are going to disagree with me on this. I'm not interested in debating it today.
I do not believe in focusing on technical solutions to people problems. I would appreciate it if people would understand and respect that when they seek to engage with me personally.
https://mastodon.social/@RuiSeabra/112877191090748791 -
esmevane, sorryreplied to Rui Seabra on last edited by
This isn't helpful. Marco knows all of this. He's very experienced with software, open source, Mastodon, the social web, all of it.
He knows what he's talking about and I think if you reread this thread you might notice you've only repeated his own words back at him.
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@ironchamber @RuiSeabra @timbray this person's bio does a very good job of explaining exactly what to expect from them. They are on brand, and I can respect that.
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1000%. Great thread. Here's my take on it, from Steps Towards a Safer Fediverse
I want to know how I can find and support people that are aligned with my values.
This is something I've heard from a lot of people. I've been working with @[email protected] on setting up a federated forum site (with opt-in federation), would it be useful to host some discussions there?
[I'm thinking of a forum for a couple of reasons: it supports private forums, for stuff that's more useful to discuss with limited visibility; and, longer-form discussions are going to be useful for something like this.]
@[email protected] -
Mike Macgirvin ๐ฅ๏ธreplied to Marco Rogers on last edited byThere are a number of fediverse platforms that are more closely aligned with your values when it comes to online safety and control of your inbox. Be aware that not all of them are like Twitter. The Twitter interaction style itself promotes and encourages harassment and abuse by design; and this interaction style is baked into ActivityPub - the underlying protocol of the fediverse. It takes a lot of effort and thinking outside the box to provide relatively safe online spaces within the confines of said protocol. But people are doing it.
I work on a very small project known colloquially as "the streams repository" and I'm personally driven by online safety. I'm not saying my software is what you're looking for. It's way out in the fringes. However - if you take a good look at what's available and look at the trajectories and visions of some of the alternatives, you might just find a new home -- with a front door lock that actually works.
Cheers. -
Pete๐ธ๐ถ๐๐ฝ๐โฎ๐๐๐ญreplied to Marco Rogers on last edited by
I'm European with low melanin levels.
I am working hard to understand why some people believe in the myth of race, and how that affects their prejudices, and how it is used in society to simplify discussions to the point of not being reality.
Ruling me out just because of my skin pigmentation and place of birth seems... I dunno... wrong?
Two wrongs don't make a right.
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Marco Rogersreplied to Pete๐ธ๐ถ๐๐ฝ๐โฎ๐๐๐ญ on last edited by
@pete just based on this post, it doesn't actually sound like you're "working hard to understand". Can you maybe try again to tell me what work you've put into trying to understand?
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Pete๐ธ๐ถ๐๐ฝ๐โฎ๐๐๐ญreplied to Marco Rogers on last edited by
@polotek Iโm not sure thatโs necessary. The discussion point is that it seems wrong to me to exclude people based upon their skin pigmentation and birthplace. Weโre not discussing how hard I am trying. If thatโs the important discussion then Iโm happy to continue, but it would be good to set out what is an acceptable definition of โtrying hardโ, otherwise itโs easy to move the goalpost and never acknowledge my efforts.
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Marco Rogersreplied to Pete๐ธ๐ถ๐๐ฝ๐โฎ๐๐๐ญ on last edited by
@pete I am discussing how hard you are trying. It is a prerequisite to me spending any more time engaging with you on this topic. Obviously you have the choice of whether you want to meet that requirement. I'm fine either way. But yes, it is required if you want to have any further discussion with me personally. Cheers.
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damonreplied to Mike Macgirvin ๐ฅ๏ธ on last edited by
@mikedev I think what you have built can be a strong foundation for what people are looking for with a sprinkle of whatever they like about Mastodon
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Pete๐ธ๐ถ๐๐ฝ๐โฎ๐๐๐ญreplied to Marco Rogers on last edited by
How can I prove that I am good enough?
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Marco Rogersreplied to Pete๐ธ๐ถ๐๐ฝ๐โฎ๐๐๐ญ on last edited by
@pete first off, you can really practice not making assumptions and jumping to conclusions. I didn't ask you to "prove" anything. I asked you to give me some info to help me understand.
If you don't even understand why it is historically relevant for Black people to be wary of this conversation, that already gives me a lot of conversation about your journey in understanding things.
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Marco Rogersreplied to Marco Rogers on last edited by
@pete there were lots of other signals. Like the phrase "the myth of race". The journey that white people have to go on to understand these things is well documented. You're giving off lots of signals that you're not very far along. It doesn't make you a bad person. It does probably make it a waste of my time to engage with you.
I hope that helps explain where I'm coming from. And I sincerely hope you find somebody who is willing to spend more time educating you. But it won't be me. Take care.
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