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The Wikimedia Foundation has joined the fediverse by setting up their own Mastodon server!
(wikimedia.social)
A community to talk about the Fediverse and all it's related services using ActivityPub (Mastodon, Lemmy, KBin, etc).
If you wanted to get help with moderating your own community then head over to !moderators@lemmy.world!
Learn more at these websites: Join The Fediverse Wiki, Fediverse.info, Wikipedia Page, The Federation Info (Stats), FediDB (Stats), Sub Rehab (Reddit Migration), Search Lemmy
I don't disagree. You're probably unlikely to find the same people on Mastodon that you followed on Twitter or elsewhere. Despite the growth it's still a drop in the bucket of global social media users.
If it means anything, I started out with Mastodon hoping to follow popular figures and very quickly stopped caring for that. It was a lot more fun and interesting to talk to normal people with normal lives. But maybe that's just me.
Who're you hoping to follow? I might be able to recommend a few folks.
That's the thing for me, is that I don't actually have anybody in particular that I want to follow. I was never a Twitter user, so I don't really have a list of accounts that I'm looking for. But as a user exploring the platform, it's always good to see names that you recognize, even if you aren't intimately interested in them.
On Twitter, if I came across a post from someone like Bill Nye, for example, I at least know who that is and what they do, and what impact that has in regards to their opinion. But on Mastodon, the top post on my feed will be from Charles Shoemaker, an Arch Linux developer with a passion for backyard composting (just making the name up, sorry to any Charles Shoemakers out there who I have just slandered). As somebody who may be just browsing the platform idly, it makes it harder to care about the content I'm seeing, if I have no idea who the people are or why I should feel connected to them.
Obviously, that's what a lot of people come here for, though. And I also get that and think it's great, but I think that it would be better-suited to a longer-form platform (perhaps a Fedi-platform that's formatted a bit more like old versions of Facebook, when they still had a focus on user-to-user engagement). I feel like microblogging is meant for feed-scrolling behavior, but the majority of Mastodon users want it to be more like full-blog engagement. Though, I'm still exploring that part of the Fediverse myself, so maybe I'm just looking at it through a narrow lens right now.
Makes sense. Could also give the mastodon community a little longer to mature.
Yeah, I wanna see how things shake out once Meta decides to federate. I think Mastodon's going to see some pretty significant shifts when that happens.