rglullis@communick.news
on 13 Jan 11:29
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We need to grow our annual operating budget to €5 million in 2025.
What for?
How many active users are going to be served by mastodon.social and mastodon.online? Is the infrastructure being provided by the companies counted as part of this budget?
How many more users are going to join the Mastodon network of servers thanks to the missing features that are planned to be released this year?
andypiper@lemmy.world
on 13 Jan 11:35
nextcollapse
there’s a big difference between running a service on volunteers, and having full-time folks to keep things running / answer the regulation discussions / keep maintaining / keep adding the features that folks are looking for. This is not primarily an infrastructure spend. There’s also an amount of legal work involved, unfortunately. So, those are some of the elements we’re looking at.
Sure. But at the end of the day, economics is just a big game of resource allocation. 5M€ can get you quite a long way, and I’m wondering if we could have better use of those resources than by putting it on Mastodon.
Can it? Because I wouldn't try to run a social media company with less than that. It's kind of shocking they make do with a tenth of it. Which I guess is helped by being staffed by the equivalent of a mid-sized McDonalds franchise.
If I was going to spend that much on anything beyond servers and full time employees I would spend it on marketing, though.
rglullis@communick.news
on 13 Jan 12:13
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I wouldn’t try to run a social media company with less than that.
I did not, in fact, make a social media company. Rochko did.
And hey, I mostly agree with the diagnosis in your link. As always with business pitches, I'm more skeptical of the leap in logic from the diagnosis to the proposal for an alternative.
Also, if a software developer tells me they will have a project done in a year I immediately walk away. Show me a production plan or don't give me a deadline. But hey, that's just me and you're not actually pitching.
For now, if Flipboard gets there with Surf we can revisit and talk about whether they needed 5 million and a year or not. I don't think it's a terrible idea, but also don't think it's going to explode. I'm ready to be proven wrong, though.
Nobody wants to spend money on legal work, but at a certain point it becomes necessary. It's not like they met up in a board meeting, discussed where money could best be spent, and decided that lawyers should be a priority.
However, if Mastodon goes down this path and does it well, they can create legal precedence that might benefit all open/federated social media organizations that follow. Especially in the current climate we could benefit a lot from having a strong social media actor representing the interests of an open web, in opposition to the armies of lawyers hired by the fascists of commercial social media.
Of course, when I donate to Mastodon I imagine all my money goes to developers. But rationally I'm aware that this might be a bit utopian.
JubilantJaguar@lemmy.world
on 13 Jan 14:11
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So insightful, so grown-up, so convincing, and then
Yes, I am saying that we would be better off by having this money put somewhere else.
I get the notion, however social networks do have an inordinate effect populations and how they think. Spending 5M€ on say, poor communities would help those poor communities (short or long term, dunno), but they could still be influenced by a shoddy social network (or multiple). Whether that sum effect is positive or not is debatable.
It's very difficult to make a judgement on utility of such a (comparatively) small sum and its target.
To be honest, I'm much more concerned about how people spend their money when they go shopping: buying non fair-trade goods like chocolate, clothes, coffee, phones, and so on, where they spend sums orders of a magnitude larger than a paltry 5-10€/month on mastodon.
SkaveRat@discuss.tchncs.de
on 13 Jan 11:36
nextcollapse
it’s not (only) for the instance. This is for paying full time jobs to manage and develop the software
Surprised to see you of all people question why a project needs money to pay for things.
What for?
They said what for in the previous section, improving Mastodon’s “usability, discoverability, and trust & safety”. They tried to fundraise for a head of trust and safety last month, but failed. My impression is this is them trying to raise general donations to the project to pay for things like this, instead of individual campaigns for individual things.
Is the infrastructure being provided by the companies counted as part of this budget?
I thinks so, given the previous paragraph links to their sponsor page and says as such.
rglullis@communick.news
on 13 Jan 12:00
nextcollapse
Surprised to see you of all people question why a project needs money to pay for things
I am not questioning the need for money. I am questioning the amount.
And yes, the reason I am asking this is precisely because I don’t believe the “not-for-profit” leads to better outcomes than any for-profit one, and I do not share the belief that all for-profit endeavors are bad.
To illustrate the point: I’d take good old Craigslist making more than $600 million per year as a tool against Big Tech and unethical corporations than any of these feel-good initiatives from Mastodon.
I’m sorry, but I fail to see the relevance of this not-for-profit vs for-profit diatribe. If you mean that things like culture and structures matter more than the a project’s legal status, then I agree, but unless you’re going to point to particular issues you have with Mastodon’s then, again, I fail to see the relevance. The things Mastodon (the company) is seeking to improve are highly technical and specialised, where people working on them need good cross-disciplinary knowledge and experience, and understandably demand a high wage.
but unless you’re going to point to particular issues you have with Mastodon’s then, again, I fail to see the relevance.
The “particular issues” I have with Mastodon (or rather, with its leadership) are rooted in its cultural values.
I think that presenting itself as the saviors of civil online discourse is ineffective. It sounds good for this tiny majority that is already here, but does nothing to bring the masses that are still stuck inside the walled gardens of Big Tech.
The difference between for-profit and not-for-profit firms is not whether one makes money and the other one does not. It’s what’s done with that money. The difference is whether the net income is given to the firm’s major shareholders or kept within the firm.
You are confusing cause and effect and you are making a pointless distinction.
If all it took to qualify as a non-profit was to eliminate profit redistribution, we would have every sole proprietorship or small LLC entity turning itself to a 503, and then distributing its excess profit as salaries.
I’m definitely not doing that. I’m pointing out that the commenter above is correct and you appear to have a misconception about what non-profit means.
They are also the main developers of the Mastodon software. It is not just hosting the service. The software needs to be able to compete with Bluesky and right now it quite simply does not. The only way to get the quality needed is to have some full time lead developers. Also they need some proper admins to run the websites. Mastodon social is at 250,000 active users right now, but it is also fairly likely to grow fast with what Elon is up to with Twitter. Just to compare Twitter used to have 7500 employees, with a 1000 today.
The software needs to be able to compete with Bluesky and right now it quite simply does not.
Mastodon has a 5 year headstart over Bluesky. Bluesky has more users, large players already getting into it and is raising money and is not ashamed to to be actively looking for a business model.
Meanwhile, Mastodon completely blew the opportunity it got when Musk bought Twitter and keeps repeating the same mistake of preaching to the converted.
What makes you think that more money would solve it? Their problem is not a lack of money, but a lack of ambition.
Well the fact is yes, Mastodon is still relatively small compared to Facebook, X or Bluesky. Mastodon has actually 7,616,908 users total: https://fedidb.org/software/mastodon. Which is a huge number, but most likely a lot of bot accounts and non-active account to be honest.
Now the reason why is Mastodon is not as large as Bluesky is debatable. I actually blame ActivityPub protocol and the complex nature of trying to become a federated platform.
Let's be honest now, most people do not care (or don't have the technical knowledge) to understand federation or decentralization. Hence people will just jump to the easiest solution: A big centralized server, aka X, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok and Bluesky. Same for search engines like Google.
Given the concern, it would be good to be explicit in the blog post. What other assets does it genuinely need? The code is open source, people are free to host instances
The existing US-based non-profit entity, the 501(c)(3), will continue to function as a fundraising hub.
Wait, is the money transferred to the US then back to the EU? And will the US-based non-profit still continue to exist or will it be replaced by a truly European one?
The 501(c)(3) is a fundraising entity, and will continue to exist. There will be a new independent European non-profit that will “own” (for the want of a better word) the other entities. Legal structures and things are not my forte (IANAL), that’s my understanding of what is happening in so far as I’m involved in the discussions and what I’m able to tell you.
jagged_circle@feddit.nl
on 13 Jan 14:46
nextcollapse
Does this mean they’ll fix all the things that Eugene refused to fix? Bullish on Eugene leaving mastodon
No, I’m not saying he depriortized it. The problem is he won’t implement it.
By search I mean I should be able to search for a keyword or URL on all instances. There is no support for this. And, again, the issue is not technical. Its Eugene blocking it because he personally does not want the feature
andypiper@lemmy.world
on 13 Jan 17:33
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won’t implement it.
“not sure downvotes make sense” -> it might not be a good fit for what the app is -> so maybe it would not make sense to implement.
I should be able to search for a keyword or URL on all instances
We’re working on this. It’s part of Fediscovery. Optional opt-in discovery across instances, if a user wants their content to be discoverable across instances.
jagged_circle@feddit.nl
on 13 Jan 22:37
nextcollapse
Doesn’t matter what the devs want. The users requested it, the devs should implement it. Instead Eugene just said “no”
That’s a strange take… But even if that logic follows, it’s pretty disingenuous to suggest that’s what ALL users want, and Eugene is the sole opposition. You and I may want global search, but lots of Mastodon users actively loathe the idea.
Personally I think it’d be a better platform for it, but I get why there are folks who don’t like the idea. I also wish they’d implement quoting people, but again, I understand why some folks don’t like that idea. Downvotes don’t really make sense on microblogging to me.
andypiper@lemmy.world
on 14 Jan 12:02
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Yes, and my impression is that there are also a ton of people who very much don’t want to be indexed or findable through inorganic means
I don’t disagree about implementing it and letting instances decide, but they’ve opted for a different compromise of letting people opt in. Having opt in vs opt out be an instance option would be nice, but open source projects aren’t always gonna align 1000% with the priorities that you have personally, unless it’s personally your project
If the user didn’t make their posts as discoverable, then no, they will not be returned in a search. The search is opt-in. It is not ideal, but it is a way to respect user privacy. I was making the point that search exists now, even if it had previously been rejected as a feature to implement, so it is not impossible for folks to change their opinions on including features.
That basically defeats the whole purpose of the platform
One time I saw a fire truck drive by and I searched twitter for “fire” and the city name. That’s the day I fell in love with Twitter. I only use it for searching for people talking about stuff.
He is stepping away from the CEO role to focus on the product. That means you are not getting anything he doesn’t want, if anything he has more control over the functionality of Mastodon.
jagged_circle@feddit.nl
on 13 Jan 22:35
nextcollapse
Yeah, that sucks. Bearish in mastodon becoming usable.
Regardless of the team dynamics, what I was getting at is simply that a CEO runs the company, and is generally not involved in minor decisions. But he is moving into a product strategy role, one that by definition is focused on what the product (mastodon) does.
cupcakezealot@lemmy.blahaj.zone
on 14 Jan 11:28
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disliking posts on an app with no algorithm seems pointless
threaded - newest
What for?
How many active users are going to be served by mastodon.social and mastodon.online? Is the infrastructure being provided by the companies counted as part of this budget?
How many more users are going to join the Mastodon network of servers thanks to the missing features that are planned to be released this year?
there’s a big difference between running a service on volunteers, and having full-time folks to keep things running / answer the regulation discussions / keep maintaining / keep adding the features that folks are looking for. This is not primarily an infrastructure spend. There’s also an amount of legal work involved, unfortunately. So, those are some of the elements we’re looking at.
Sure. But at the end of the day, economics is just a big game of resource allocation. 5M€ can get you quite a long way, and I’m wondering if we could have better use of those resources than by putting it on Mastodon.
Can it? Because I wouldn't try to run a social media company with less than that. It's kind of shocking they make do with a tenth of it. Which I guess is helped by being staffed by the equivalent of a mid-sized McDonalds franchise.
If I was going to spend that much on anything beyond servers and full time employees I would spend it on marketing, though.
Then don’t make a “social media company”. Change the game.
The goal is not to “compete” with social media companies. The goal is to build tools and digital infrastructure that can let people communicate with each other (a) cheaply, (b) without intermediaries and © with robust protections against malicious actors of varying scale.
Give me 5 million euros and one single year, and I can definitely build it. Fuck, give me half a million and I’ll do it.
I did not, in fact, make a social media company. Rochko did.
And hey, I mostly agree with the diagnosis in your link. As always with business pitches, I'm more skeptical of the leap in logic from the diagnosis to the proposal for an alternative.
Also, if a software developer tells me they will have a project done in a year I immediately walk away. Show me a production plan or don't give me a deadline. But hey, that's just me and you're not actually pitching.
For now, if Flipboard gets there with Surf we can revisit and talk about whether they needed 5 million and a year or not. I don't think it's a terrible idea, but also don't think it's going to explode. I'm ready to be proven wrong, though.
Nobody wants to spend money on legal work, but at a certain point it becomes necessary. It's not like they met up in a board meeting, discussed where money could best be spent, and decided that lawyers should be a priority.
However, if Mastodon goes down this path and does it well, they can create legal precedence that might benefit all open/federated social media organizations that follow. Especially in the current climate we could benefit a lot from having a strong social media actor representing the interests of an open web, in opposition to the armies of lawyers hired by the fascists of commercial social media.
Of course, when I donate to Mastodon I imagine all my money goes to developers. But rationally I'm aware that this might be a bit utopian.
So insightful, so grown-up, so convincing, and then
Sometimes I despair.
Oh no :(
.
What are you suggesting? That the money donated to Mastodon not be used on Mastodon?
The money wasn’t donated yet. This is their stated goal.
Yes, I am saying that we would be better off by having this money put somewhere else.
I get the notion, however social networks do have an inordinate effect populations and how they think. Spending 5M€ on say, poor communities would help those poor communities (short or long term, dunno), but they could still be influenced by a shoddy social network (or multiple). Whether that sum effect is positive or not is debatable.
It's very difficult to make a judgement on utility of such a (comparatively) small sum and its target.
To be honest, I'm much more concerned about how people spend their money when they go shopping: buying non fair-trade goods like chocolate, clothes, coffee, phones, and so on, where they spend sums orders of a magnitude larger than a paltry 5-10€/month on mastodon.
it’s not (only) for the instance. This is for paying full time jobs to manage and develop the software
I know. The second question is meant to cover this…
Surprised to see you of all people question why a project needs money to pay for things.
They said what for in the previous section, improving Mastodon’s “usability, discoverability, and trust & safety”. They tried to fundraise for a head of trust and safety last month, but failed. My impression is this is them trying to raise general donations to the project to pay for things like this, instead of individual campaigns for individual things.
I thinks so, given the previous paragraph links to their sponsor page and says as such.
I am not questioning the need for money. I am questioning the amount.
And yes, the reason I am asking this is precisely because I don’t believe the “not-for-profit” leads to better outcomes than any for-profit one, and I do not share the belief that all for-profit endeavors are bad.
To illustrate the point: I’d take good old Craigslist making more than $600 million per year as a tool against Big Tech and unethical corporations than any of these feel-good initiatives from Mastodon.
I’m sorry, but I fail to see the relevance of this not-for-profit vs for-profit diatribe. If you mean that things like culture and structures matter more than the a project’s legal status, then I agree, but unless you’re going to point to particular issues you have with Mastodon’s then, again, I fail to see the relevance. The things Mastodon (the company) is seeking to improve are highly technical and specialised, where people working on them need good cross-disciplinary knowledge and experience, and understandably demand a high wage.
The “particular issues” I have with Mastodon (or rather, with its leadership) are rooted in its cultural values.
I think that presenting itself as the saviors of civil online discourse is ineffective. It sounds good for this tiny majority that is already here, but does nothing to bring the masses that are still stuck inside the walled gardens of Big Tech.
The difference between for-profit and not-for-profit firms is not whether one makes money and the other one does not. It’s what’s done with that money. The difference is whether the net income is given to the firm’s major shareholders or kept within the firm.
You are confusing cause and effect and you are making a pointless distinction.
If all it took to qualify as a non-profit was to eliminate profit redistribution, we would have every sole proprietorship or small LLC entity turning itself to a 503, and then distributing its excess profit as salaries.
You mean 501©, and distribution of excess profit would at minimum evoke an excise tax and might cause loss of 501© status.
You are right about the code , but you are also making my point about why it matters if the whole endeavor is classified as for-profit or not.
I’m definitely not doing that. I’m pointing out that the commenter above is correct and you appear to have a misconception about what non-profit means.
People aren’t going to donate for unimportant things.
They are also the main developers of the Mastodon software. It is not just hosting the service. The software needs to be able to compete with Bluesky and right now it quite simply does not. The only way to get the quality needed is to have some full time lead developers. Also they need some proper admins to run the websites. Mastodon social is at 250,000 active users right now, but it is also fairly likely to grow fast with what Elon is up to with Twitter. Just to compare Twitter used to have 7500 employees, with a 1000 today.
Mastodon has a 5 year headstart over Bluesky. Bluesky has more users, large players already getting into it and is raising money and is not ashamed to to be actively looking for a business model.
Meanwhile, Mastodon completely blew the opportunity it got when Musk bought Twitter and keeps repeating the same mistake of preaching to the converted.
What makes you think that more money would solve it? Their problem is not a lack of money, but a lack of ambition.
I don't agree at all with the lack of ambition.
Well the fact is yes, Mastodon is still relatively small compared to Facebook, X or Bluesky. Mastodon has actually 7,616,908 users total: https://fedidb.org/software/mastodon. Which is a huge number, but most likely a lot of bot accounts and non-active account to be honest.
Now the reason why is Mastodon is not as large as Bluesky is debatable. I actually blame ActivityPub protocol and the complex nature of trying to become a federated platform.
Let's be honest now, most people do not care (or don't have the technical knowledge) to understand federation or decentralization. Hence people will just jump to the easiest solution: A big centralized server, aka X, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok and Bluesky. Same for search engines like Google.
The problem is not with the federated model, per se. Matrix is federated and it has 100M+ users.
The problem is a cultural one: Mastodon promoted federation along the idea that instances should be aligned with its member’s identity. It’s a mistake of their own doing, which was reflected on their own UX and marketing copy for a long time.
No mention of the name Mastodon and copyrights which I seem to recall is one of the bigger complaints
These are part of the assets that will be transferred from the GmbH to the non-profit.
Given the concern, it would be good to be explicit in the blog post. What other assets does it genuinely need? The code is open source, people are free to host instances
Checking about getting it updated.
now updated.
Great news indeed then, go Mastodon!
Lemmy has the same issues I believe. Lots of people not exactly happy with the two core devs either
What does this mean for John Mastodon’s grandkids?
Yes. He is not a an-i-mal.
I feel like you’ve answered the wrong comment, and this a-ni-mal(? am I saying that right?) refers to someone else
Wait, is the money transferred to the US then back to the EU? And will the US-based non-profit still continue to exist or will it be replaced by a truly European one?
The 501(c)(3) is a fundraising entity, and will continue to exist. There will be a new independent European non-profit that will “own” (for the want of a better word) the other entities. Legal structures and things are not my forte (IANAL), that’s my understanding of what is happening in so far as I’m involved in the discussions and what I’m able to tell you.
Does this mean they’ll fix all the things that Eugene refused to fix? Bullish on Eugene leaving mastodon
Like what?
I do like to have full markdown support that is for sure.
Search. Downvotes. He has blocked those forever.
Search exists. I’m not sure downvotes make sense in the context of a microblogging app, but YMMV. There’s a lot of things to work on, for sure.
No, I’m not saying he depriortized it. The problem is he won’t implement it.
By search I mean I should be able to search for a keyword or URL on all instances. There is no support for this. And, again, the issue is not technical. Its Eugene blocking it because he personally does not want the feature
“not sure downvotes make sense” -> it might not be a good fit for what the app is -> so maybe it would not make sense to implement.
We’re working on this. It’s part of Fediscovery. Optional opt-in discovery across instances, if a user wants their content to be discoverable across instances.
Doesn’t matter what the devs want. The users requested it, the devs should implement it. Instead Eugene just said “no”
This has to be one of the funniest takes I’ve ever seen, esp considering the nature of the project and the devs who work on it.
Are you familiar with what happened to reddit when they stopped listening to their users?
That’s a strange take… But even if that logic follows, it’s pretty disingenuous to suggest that’s what ALL users want, and Eugene is the sole opposition. You and I may want global search, but lots of Mastodon users actively loathe the idea.
Personally I think it’d be a better platform for it, but I get why there are folks who don’t like the idea. I also wish they’d implement quoting people, but again, I understand why some folks don’t like that idea. Downvotes don’t really make sense on microblogging to me.
quote posts are being implemented.
Oh neat!! I thought that idea had been shot down, that’s cool to hear
Thanks for letting me know :) Hope you have a lovely day
There’s a ton on people who want it. Its not just a few.
And if that’s the case, implement it and let instance admins or users themselves be able to turn it off.
But don’t pull a reddit and just ignore users.
Yes, and my impression is that there are also a ton of people who very much don’t want to be indexed or findable through inorganic means
I don’t disagree about implementing it and letting instances decide, but they’ve opted for a different compromise of letting people opt in. Having opt in vs opt out be an instance option would be nice, but open source projects aren’t always gonna align 1000% with the priorities that you have personally, unless it’s personally your project
Didn’t Eugene say “no” to searches too?
I don’t know, I was not involved if that was said at some time, but now, we have search, so I don’t know what to tell you.
O rly?
Search for a URL to a popular news article. It will not return all the toots that include that URL.
If the user didn’t make their posts as discoverable, then no, they will not be returned in a search. The search is opt-in. It is not ideal, but it is a way to respect user privacy. I was making the point that search exists now, even if it had previously been rejected as a feature to implement, so it is not impossible for folks to change their opinions on including features.
That basically defeats the whole purpose of the platform
One time I saw a fire truck drive by and I searched twitter for “fire” and the city name. That’s the day I fell in love with Twitter. I only use it for searching for people talking about stuff.
If search doesn’t work, I have no use for it.
Search on Mastodon is annoyingly restrictive, but you’re never getting “full search across all instances”. Remote search just isn’t a thing.
Even fucking Google is local.
There’s absolutely no technical restriction for indexing URLs and sharing which instances ’ toots have that URL
“If I eat up a ton of bandwidth and storage, I can make remote content local” is fun until you’re the one paying for the bandwidth and storage.
Indexes are small
Ehem. masto.kukei.eu is not great but it is an honest work
He is stepping away from the CEO role to focus on the product. That means you are not getting anything he doesn’t want, if anything he has more control over the functionality of Mastodon.
Yeah, that sucks. Bearish in mastodon becoming usable.
I do not think that is a factual representation of the team dynamics, but of course, you are free to choose that interpretation.
Regardless of the team dynamics, what I was getting at is simply that a CEO runs the company, and is generally not involved in minor decisions. But he is moving into a product strategy role, one that by definition is focused on what the product (mastodon) does.
disliking posts on an app with no algorithm seems pointless
Why wouldn’t there be algorithms for the feed sort? Or did Eugene block that request too?
This is a great move. Governance is extremely important for bigger OSS projects, and the “benevolent dictator” model has its limits.