I've seen some people on Mastodon talking about how news organizations could just set up their own Mastodon instances, and only give accounts to their employed journalists. That way they could all repost each other's stuff but no one would have to put up with Twitter's policies. I think that's a pretty cool use case for the technology, and similar to what you're describing here.
/kbin meta
Magazine dedicated to discussions about the kbin itself. Provide feedback, ask questions, suggest improvements, and engage in conversations related to the platform organization, policies, features, and community dynamics. ---- * Roadmap 2023 * m/kbinDevlog * m/kbinDesign
It's also a self-verification system. You know that's not someone spoofing a reporter's identity if they have an @social.npr.com account.
I just had a horrible idea... what if Microsoft offered you the possibility of creating a federated account for you, on their own instance, for free, for example as you install Windows or activate a Microsoft service somewhere? Microsoft would carry the most weight around all instances, by default.
Omg, I created a monster!
cough Meta cough
That would be horrible and I'd have switched to BSD quicker than the screen would load on the Windows Install prompt
You switched from BSD to Windows???
Honestly, it'd be pretty neat if Microsoft setup their own instance and consolidated all of their communities onto it. The user part is optional. Since it was federated, you could post to it from other instances (right...? Provided they don't get black listed).
I feel like Microsoft has 10 different community forums for all different aspects of their business. Centralizing it onto an instance like this with magazines for each would actually be reallllllly helpful.
It probably wouldn't happen but that might be cool. It would be a lot easier for people to get into the fediverse if they already have an account.
The best thing for me is if big companies do come here and do that, I can use an instance that defederates from them.