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Is this the last exodus from Twitter? from hiddedevries.nl Blog RSS feed.
Is this the last exodus from Twitter?
There have been reasons to leave Twitter since its inception. But it is increasingly more compelling to do so.
Why read what random internet people are doing all day? In 2007, I wasn't sure why I would join Twitter that spring. All the cool web folks at SXSW that year had started using (and hyping) it. I worked at a small web agency and my colleagues convinced me, I think. So I made an account on this new website that had just one text field with the question ‘What are you doing?’.
When I started, I mostly shared things like that I drank a cup of tea or waited for a bus. Mentions and retweets didn't exist yet. For the first, maybe, 5 years, my account was private and I had way under 100 followers. I tweeted mostly in Dutch, even in Frisian sometimes. There was a generous API so you could trivially display tweets on your own site. There were local in-person Twitter meetups, at least where I live, to hang out with Twitter folks, including one that had Dries Roelvink perform.
In the years after, the platform expanded beyond the web developer crowd and interesting journalists, authors, musicians came. I used the platform more and more to follow folks I saw speak at conferences. Over the years I found a collection of hundreds of people whose stuff I really enjoyed reading. On web development, but also other interests. Some posted often, others occassionally. Either way, I learned so much from the tweets, links to other sites, discussions and what not. More people started following me too, and I managed to develop real friendships. My DMs got busier too.
There were always compelling reasons to leave, too. The platform and tweets became more engagement-focused, the Twittersphere attracted more and more grifters. The algorithmic timeline was introduced, although that could be turned off.
There was also the increasing abuse, especially towards minorities. Under Jack Dorsey's leadership, Twitter systematically failed to act on reports of racist, homophobic and misogynist accounts, making the platform more dangerous to anyone not a cis white male, even getting users in physical danger. Some of that was described in a 2018 Amnesty International report on Twitter called “A toxic place for women”, a document full of details on how the company failed to respect women's rights.
And then there was the risk of making content on a platform that you don't control. My friend Manuel got permanently suspended, for reasons unknown to him. I can only imagine what it was like for him to just lose access. A lot of us tried to change the minds of “@TwitterSupport”, but it wasn't resolved. For a lot of folks it was a wake up call to reconsider where they post. I realised my new ambition was to like, Zach, take ownership of my tweets.
Last week, I still didn't feel like leaving the platform just because the new owner was an arrogant troll with world views orthogonal to mine. I imagine this may be the case with more services I use, and had tried Mastodogn before without much success. I don't think I really believe in decentralised social networks, I would rather have all my friends in one pub than spread across pubs. But then that new owner fired Twitter's entire accessibility team and large parts of trust and safety folks working on problems that have very real life consequences (like meddling in elections, spreading of conspiracy theories, hate crimes, impersonation), he unfolded plans for a new ‘Verified’ program that made the feature for sale rather than for security and then he recklessly and cruelly fired half of the staff… so I decided to go ahead and hang out elsewhere, at least to put my content there.
That other place is ‘the Fediverse’.
the Fediverse is different: it isn’t trying to glue your eyeballs to the screen, and it’s harder for things to go viral. There is less media, fewer memes, no advertising. And there are humans explicitly in the loop: Mastodon instances are moderated on an instance-by-instance basis — and should an instance descend into a hellscape, it may find itself defederated. But because of all of this, there is also less opportunism, less trolling, less dunking on your enemies, less nastiness. So it also feels more relaxing, more earnest — and easier to put down.
(from Bryan Cantrill's Twitter, when the wall came down)
Maybe the decentralisation aspect could actually work. It's a bit like email.
It seems like the new owner and his behaviour is driving people in my bubble away from Twitter, towards the Fediverse, personal blogs, RSS and other platforms. Probably mostly in that bubble, but maybe it is a wider thing, time will have to tell.
I didn't suddenly stop caring about the people I follow on Twitter, so I will probably also stay on Twitter for the foreseable future. To catch up on tweets, to DM and to share posts like this one. But for the next while, I plan to hang around on Mastodon more.
Originally posted as Is this the last exodus from Twitter? on Hidde's blog.