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# 2025-02-10 - Counterforce Guide To Mastodon And Fediverse | |
Cover image | |
by Martin Force | |
# Introduction | |
The hardcore punk underground has been on corporate social media | |
since MySpace. Some resisted it, some embraced it, but mostly we have | |
just followed mainstream culture's passive slide into digital | |
dystopia. In 2025 every band has an Instagram account, every show | |
needs a Facebook event and you only see a show flyer if you are lucky | |
enough to catch it in someone's Story. | |
Punks are increasingly realizing how fucked corporate social media is | |
(about time!). We hunger for better ways to check in with each other, | |
share our music and thoughts, promote shows, connect across borders, | |
and shit talk. What's presented here is a possible solution, an | |
experiment, or at least a step in the right direction. | |
You maybe have heard of alternatives like Mastodon or PixelFed. These | |
are not just reinventions of the apps we know. They are part of a | |
decentralized, open network called the Fediverse. This network is | |
totally different from corporate social media on a structural level, | |
making it highly resistant to corporate capture and allowing it to | |
evade surveillance capitalism. It's a network that we can not only | |
join but build ourselves. | |
In this guide, I will try to explain what the Fediverse is, why it's | |
cool for punks, give a practical how-to on getting started with | |
Mastodon, and lay out some dreams for the future. | |
# What Mastodon/The Fediverse are NOT: | |
## ...Easy | |
Understanding this stuff is not easy because it's so different from | |
what we are used to. You can totally create a Mastodon account and | |
give it a spin without any of this context, but you probably won't | |
find it very interesting (or very punk). If you tried Mastodon | |
already and didn't really "get" it, I hope you'll read on and give it | |
another try! | |
When you first used corporate social media, there was a learning | |
curve too. No one is born knowing how Instagram works. The big apps | |
have spent fortunes to design a social media experience that is both | |
frictionless (easy to start using), and sticky (hard to leave). | |
Mastodon and the Fediverse are neither frictionless, nor sticky. Like | |
punk, they are built by hobbyists, non-profit initiatives and | |
informal networks. They don't have the same addictive appeal as | |
corporate apps. They aren't trying to trap you, and they aren't here | |
to entertain you. Instead, their genuine purpose is to help us | |
connect with each other online. | |
So bear with me as you work through this guide. Liberation requires | |
struggle, and knowledge is power. That might be a little dramatic, | |
but given that corporate social media plays such a dominant role in | |
human culture (not just our hardcore punk underground), I believe | |
that wrestling control of our lives and our culture back from fashy | |
tech billionaires is a struggle with real stakes! | |
## ...A secure and private communication tool | |
It's 2025. Don't use DMs on any social media app to talk about | |
anything serious. Use Signal. Even if you don't think you need | |
Signal, someone who wants to talk to you does. Signal Stories and | |
group chats are great if you want digital spaces that are social and | |
also very secure (maybe a topic of a future how-to). | |
## ...An entertainment platform | |
Mastodon doesn't care about your attention or entertaining you. If | |
you are looking to be fed a more ethical doomscroll, this probably | |
isn't the place. You will only get out of it what you put in. | |
## ...A place to go viral | |
It's a hard place to go viral. There's no toxic algorithm to push | |
your content into other people's feeds. It's hard to be an | |
influencer. Don't try. Influencers aren't really welcome anyways! | |
## ...A replacement for the real world | |
The Internet lets us build a hardcore punk underground that is | |
international. It facilitates connection through pandemics, harsh | |
seasons, mental health struggles and isolation. | |
Even if you are a true no-phone punk, this discussion matters to you: | |
you might not use Instagram, but your band or shows or zines are | |
still getting shared there by your fellow punks. We are all | |
participating in an underground that relies in large part on social | |
media, for better or worse. It's important to meet people where they | |
are. So, we must intervene in how punks engage online, just as we | |
don't want to see all punk shows happen at Clear Channel or Live | |
Nation venues. | |
But the hardcore punk underground shouldn't live exclusively on the | |
Internet. When was the last time you got a paper handbill? Make | |
flyers, go to shows, print and distribute zines, help run a DIY | |
venue, start a distro. The Counterforce supports all these offline | |
strategies (have you read the manifesto?). Don't let your enthusiasm | |
and interest in these (cool and radical) online alternatives distract | |
you from building in-person relationships and connections. Hardcore | |
punk will always happen first at shows, in zines, on tapes, on | |
records. | |
Manifesto | |
gopher://tilde.pink/I/~bencollver/log/2025-02-10-counterforce-guide-to-mastodon… | |
# What is Mastodon? | |
As I've mentioned, Mastodon is part of the Fediverse. I'll get to | |
what that means later, but let's just start with understanding | |
Mastodon. | |
Superficially, it's social media akin to Twitter or Tumblr. You see a | |
feed of posts from accounts you follow. You can like, boost (re-post) | |
or reply to other posts. You can make your own posts with images, | |
text and links, and you can tag other users. For the most part, there | |
are no ads and there's no algorithm. Rather than being fed an endless | |
scroll of suggested content, what you see in your timeline is | |
determined entirely by what you choose to follow. | |
A timeline like any other? | |
# Understanding Mastodon through E-mail | |
Although it looks more like Twitter, structurally Mastodon might be | |
more similar to e-mail. | |
Here's the main Mastodon account for The Counterforce: | |
@[email protected] | |
It looks like an e-mail address with an extra @ on the front. | |
The_Counterforce is our username and kolektiva.social is the Mastodon | |
server that hosts our account (a large anarchist server). Just | |
telling someone to follow "@The_Counterforce on Mastodon" isn't | |
enough! The server part must be included, just as with an e-mail | |
address. | |
Kolektiva.social is one Mastodon server, but there are thousands of | |
others - just as there are countless different e-mail servers such as | |
gmail.com, protonmail.com or riseup.net. When you sign up for a | |
Mastodon account, you choose one server and your account lives on | |
that server. We often refer to these different servers as different | |
instances. | |
Here are some Mastodon accounts we like. Note that they are on | |
different Mastodon servers: | |
* @[email protected] | |
La Chaine, a punk newsletter in Montreal has its account on | |
438punk.house, a Mastodon server for the Montreal punk scene. | |
* @[email protected] | |
Just some punk with an account is on Counterforce.social, a server | |
that you can use to try out Mastodon later in this guide! | |
* @[email protected] | |
The anarchist media collective subMedia is also on | |
Kolektiva.social, the same server as The Counterforce! | |
One of the cool things about e-mail is that no matter which server | |
hosts your e-mail account, you can still send and receive e-mails to | |
accounts on any other server. You do it all the time! Mastodon takes | |
this concept (called interoperability) and applies it to social | |
media: users with accounts on different Mastodon servers can follow | |
and interact with each other. | |
So you see? Mastodon is not just a single social media app, it's a | |
huge decentralized network of connected servers! | |
Users on different Mastodon servers (aka instances) can all follow | |
one another. | |
gopher://tilde.pink/I/~bencollver/log/2025-02-10-counterforce-guide-to-mastodon… | |
# Choosing a Mastodon server | |
Mastodon servers are all connected, but they are not all the same. | |
There are a few reasons why it matters which server you choose: | |
## Discovery | |
It's easier to discover stuff on your own server, or on servers with | |
a lot of connections with yours. If you're on a server with other | |
punks, you'll probably see more punk stuff. | |
## Moderation | |
Each server handles its own content moderation, so you can choose a | |
server where you agree with the moderation policies. Large servers | |
tend to have more spam and trolls, and in extreme cases servers will | |
completely block each other to prevent trolling or harassment. | |
## Autonomy and Trust | |
Your Mastodon server handles your data. It's where all your posts | |
live. You have to trust the admin, but that admin can be someone you | |
actually know instead of Mark Zuckerburg or Elon Musk. | |
Most Mastodon servers are just run by people. The server software is | |
free and open source, so anyone can set up their own (DIY). Mastodon | |
works best when servers are small, and based around common interests | |
and affinity, e.g. a local punk scene. Communities can agree on the | |
common goals, moderation policies, and how to pay the bills and keep | |
the server running. You can choose a server where you fit in, or | |
start your own if you have different needs or desires. | |
# What is The Fediverse? ⁂ | |
The Fediverse is a network of interconnected social media platforms. | |
The name comes from "federated" + "universe" (not "feds"). As you | |
just learned, Mastodon is not a single server, but a decentralized | |
network of autonomous interconnected servers. They make up a | |
"federation". Not unlike the international network of DIY punk, | |
right? | |
But the Fediverse is bigger than just Mastodon. There are many other | |
platforms that make up the Fediverse. While Mastodon looks and | |
functions similar to Twitter or Tumblr, these other platforms are | |
often also bootlegs of familiar corporate social media: | |
* PixelFed (photo-centric like Instagram) | |
https://pixelfed.org/ | |
* PeerTube (video-centric like YouTube) | |
https://joinpeertube.org/ | |
* Misskey (like Tumblr but anime themed) | |
https://misskey-hub.net/en/ | |
* Bookwyrm (for tracking and reviewing books, like Goodreads) | |
https://bookwyrm.social/ | |
* Lemmy (links and discussion like Reddit) | |
https://join-lemmy.org/ | |
* WriteFreely (blogs like Wordpress) | |
https://writefreely.org/ | |
Each of these platforms have a different focus, like prioritizing | |
photo or video content. There are many more that I didn't list. But | |
they all have users, and profiles, and posts. You have an account, | |
you post things, you follow other accounts and see their posts in a | |
feed. It's all fundamentally the same. | |
As with Mastodon, all of these Fediverse platforms aren't just one | |
server. There are also hundreds of different PixelFed, PeerTube, | |
Misskey, and Lemmy servers. And as with Mastodon, users on any server | |
can follow users on any other server. | |
Wait, on any other server? Can a user on a Mastodon server follow a | |
user on a PixelFed server? | |
Yes! | |
With a Mastodon account, you can follow accounts on other Mastodon | |
servers, and you can also follow accounts on servers from any of | |
these other Fediverse platforms. You are not restricted to | |
interacting with accounts on the same server as you, or even the same | |
platform. Everything in the Fediverse is fair game. | |
As Mastodon user @[email protected], here are some things | |
I can follow: | |
* @[email protected] | |
another Mastodon account on a different server. | |
* @[email protected] | |
a PeerTube account posting videos from the anarchist media | |
collective SubMedia. | |
* @[email protected] | |
a Castopod account posting podcast episodes from The Final Straw. | |
* @[email protected] | |
an online calendar website powered by Gancio that can also be | |
followed from the Fediverse. | |
Posts from all over the Fediverse, delivered to my Mastodon feed! | |
I'll see different kinds of posts from all of these accounts in my | |
feed. Not just Mastodon posts from other Mastodon servers, but photos | |
from an account on a PixelFed server, videos from an account on a | |
PeerTube server, and new events from a Gancio calendar. | |
Gianco Calendar | |
Users on different servers and different platforms all across the | |
Fediverse can follow one another | |
gopher://tilde.pink/I/~bencollver/log/2025-02-10-counterforce-guide-to-mastodon… | |
This is the Fediverse! A huge network of alternative platforms, each | |
of which is made up of thousands of autonomous servers that all | |
connect to each other. As a user, you can have an account on any | |
server, regardless of which platform, and still follow and interact | |
with accounts or posts anywhere else on the Fediverse. | |
# Why does this matter? | |
Well first, fuck corporate social media. Its purpose is to collect | |
your data and attention and sell both to advertisers (or worse). | |
*You* are the product! The "social" aspect of social media exists | |
solely to maximize the amount of attention and personal data that can | |
be squeezed out of you. | |
Not to mention the myriad ways that these apps bolster the war | |
machine, contribute to or cause genocides, and deepen our isolation | |
and individual despair! These sites and the people who run them are | |
*fucked*, and we should not be willingly supporting them by | |
contributing to the appeal of their products by locking up our art, | |
music, and ideas inside their walled gardens. | |
The hardcore punk underground has always been a federated network, | |
when you think about it. If we are connecting online, we should be | |
trying to do it following the same principles. | |
## The Fediverse is inherently anti-corporate | |
All of the software and protocols that build the Fediverse are free | |
and open-source. It's impossible for any single person or company to | |
buy or own the entire network. It is mostly built by non-profits, | |
foundations, collectives, and individuals. A lot of the developers | |
are queer and trans weirdos with radical politics. Capitalists hate | |
it because it's hard to monetize. It has many excellent accessibility | |
features. From the ground up it was designed to be an actual social | |
network that facilitates open connection and communication rather | |
than extracting profit from users. | |
## It's DIY | |
The Fediverse has thousands of servers because anyone can create one | |
- it's relatively cheap and accessible. We can create our own | |
Mastodon, PeerTube or PixelFed servers and grow the network. These | |
servers can be centered around our communities and based on our | |
needs. The Fediverse allows us to own and control our online networks | |
instead of relying on a mainstream capitalist option to serve us (at | |
what cost?). | |
## It won't keep leaving us | |
How many show photos will be lost when Instagram dies? (Maybe their | |
AI model will be able to generate new show photos for us?) How many | |
demos will disappear when Bandcamp shuts down? Old heads remember | |
MySpace - so many screamo demos lost in time, like tears in rain... | |
Every time a corporate social media network shuts down or becomes | |
intolerable, we lose everything we've uploaded and all the | |
connections we've made there. | |
Shit can happen on the Fediverse too: your Mastodon server admin | |
could get hit by a bus. But at least on the Fediverse, we are the | |
ones in control of our data, connections and network. Instead of | |
jumping on the next shiny corporate app that is just going to turn to | |
shit in a few years (they always do), The Fediverse allows us to | |
invest in something that won't disappear (unless it's on our terms). | |
## A healthier scroll | |
Without a profit motive driving it, the Fediverse is not an addictive | |
doomscroll. You choose what you want to see, open your computer to | |
get updated, scroll to the bottom and log off. It can be boring in | |
the best way! The difference in vibe and lack of algorithm means | |
people are generally nicer and engage on a more authentic level. You | |
won't go viral, but you'll meet actual humans whose company you enjoy. | |
## A safer scroll | |
The Fediverse is built for the users instead of for the CEOs, so the | |
Fediverse has better safety and privacy controls. It's still the | |
Internet, and public things are public. But the Fediverse overall has | |
far better options for keeping some things private and having better | |
control over your data and who has access to it. Your admin can be | |
someone you actually know and trust. You can even be your own admin. | |
## Not a walled garden | |
Apps like Instagram, Facebook and Twitter lock content behind a login | |
wall. Those of us on the outside are forced to sell ourselves out and | |
create an account see anything. | |
The Fediverse is open. Not only can accounts on the Fediverse follow | |
each other, wherever they are (different servers, different | |
platforms), anyone on the Internet can view a Fediverse profile and | |
its public posts. You can share a link your account with people who | |
don't know and don't care about the Fediverse and they can still see | |
whatever you've chosen to make public. Having an account here is like | |
having a free website! | |
# Dreams | |
Hopefully by this point you are getting on board! Before we get into | |
the practical how-to stuff, here's are some dreams for the future: | |
* Every city or region sets up their own Mastodon server for the | |
local punks. This provides a local hub, and since servers are | |
connected we can easily follow what's going on in other cities | |
besides our own. | |
* Bands, distros, zines, and show promoters set up accounts on the | |
Fediverse instead of posting their content exclusively on closed | |
corporate platforms. Give people a better option to see your stuff! | |
* We see PixelFed servers for show photographers and PeerTube servers | |
(PunkTube?) for live vids and video zines. | |
* There's a project in development called Bandwagon that aims to | |
recreate Bandcamp for the Fediverse: bands can upload their music | |
to a profile, and punks anywhere on the Fediverse can listen and | |
follow to get updates about new releases and shows. Soon, DIY | |
labels could host their own Bandwagon server for bands they release. | |
Bandwagon | |
# On leaving corporate social media | |
I won't waste more space laying out the myriad reasons you should | |
abandon corporate platforms like Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, | |
TikTok, Discord, YouTube, etc. Simply put, it's embarrassing how much | |
punk culture gets shared on these apps and only on these apps. But I | |
will recognize leaving them cold turkey can be difficult for some of | |
you. You risk losing all the connections you have built. Why would | |
you want to try an alternative if "nobody is there"? | |
You can start using Mastodon while still checking Instagram or | |
whatever. This is especially important if you use social media as a | |
band/distro/zine/show promoter/other project. I get that the audience | |
on Mastodon today is small, but if you post there you'll be investing | |
in something sustainable that we control. You'll be giving other | |
people a better way to see your stuff if they want to leave corporate | |
social media (or never sold out in the first place). | |
Trying Mastodon might be a slow burn, but you need to take a leap of | |
faith and keep at it. If enough of us invest in it, then the momentum | |
will snowball and we'll find ourselves using something far more | |
sustainable, healthy, radical, and in our control. The reason | |
corporate social media is hard to leave is because they intentionally | |
trap us there. We have to actively fight to break free! | |
# Mastodon how-to | |
To give you a practical how-to, I'm gonna focus on Mastodon. Mastodon | |
isn't the whole Fediverse, but it is one of the most popular | |
platforms, with polish and nice apps. It's the easiest way to get | |
started. | |
> Stop! Do not just type "Mastodon" into your app store without | |
> reading this. You will probably end up with an account on | |
> Mastodon.social like a poser. We warned you! | |
Remember that Mastodon is decentralized: there are many servers, not | |
just one Mastodon.com (which is actually a website for a mulcher, FYI). | |
You need to find or pick a server to sign up on (remember, it's like | |
e-mail). Sure, you could create your account on Mastodon.social (the | |
Mastodon equivalent of Gmail), but it's huge and full of normies, | |
trolls, and occasionally spam. Your admin will be some German man | |
named John Mastodon. And remember, the server name is the second part | |
of your account name. So everyone sees it. It's worthwhile to have a | |
cool one. | |
In our dreams (see above), every local scene would have a Mastodon | |
server (or two even, because of inter-scene beef) and you could just | |
sign up there. But for now, your options are limited. There are a lot | |
of servers, but a lot of them suck. If you do have a local Mastodon | |
server, or if you've heard of one from a friend please sign up there! | |
If not, you are welcome to try setting up an account on our Mastodon | |
server: | |
# COUNTERFORCE.SOCIAL | |
Counterforce.social is a Mastodon server for Counterforce-aligned | |
projects or individuals, and a landing pad for Fedi-curious punks and | |
readers of this guide. But Counterforce.social can't be the sole | |
Mastodon server for punks everywhere. It is a stepping stone, but | |
ultimately we need more punks to set up their own servers and | |
contribute to a decentralized network. | |
So, feel free to sign up with us and explore how Mastodon and the | |
Fediverse work and feel. Invite friends to read this how-to and join | |
you. But then try to get the ball rolling on creating your own server | |
for your community. | |
Mastodon allows you to move your account from one server to another. | |
So don't be too stressed: when the day comes and you start or find a | |
better Mastodon server, you can move your account and transfer all | |
your follows and followers. | |
## Create your account | |
Some servers have open registration, some are invite-only, and some | |
require approval for new accounts. New accounts on | |
Counterforce.social require approval. If you sign up there, there | |
will be a prompt to say a bit about yourself and why you want an | |
account on Counterforce.social. | |
How To Move To A Different Mastodon Instance | |
## To Create an account on Counterforce.social | |
* Go to https://counterforce.social in your web browser and click | |
Create Account. | |
* Read the server rules. | |
* Choose a username and password. There is also a text box to fill | |
out that refers to this guide. If you are signing up using the | |
Mastodon app (we told you not to) this text box will say "Why do | |
you want to join?" | |
Fill out the text box by mentioning that you're reading this guide, | |
where you're from, and name two records: one that got you into | |
punk, and something you listened to lately. We probably won't | |
approve you if you don't include this. We're not keeping score, but | |
we gotta keep out the spammers and trolls, right? | |
* Check your e-mail to confirm your e-mail address | |
* Wait for your account to be approved (you'll get an e-mail)! | |
Approval could take as long as a day or two–-we are just a few | |
unpaid humans! Why not read the rest of this how-to while you are | |
waiting for your approval e-mail? | |
## Your new Mastodon account | |
OK, you got your account, something like: | |
@[email protected]. Once again, remember that it's like | |
e-mail: your account has a username and a server. | |
On your first login, Mastodon will prompt you to follow some people | |
and fill out your profile. Do us all a favor and add something to | |
your profile. A profile pic and a bio so we know you are not a bot. | |
No one will follow you back if your profile is blank! | |
## Logging in | |
You can always access Mastodon by going to your server's homepage | |
(e.g. https://counterforce.social) in a browser and logging in. This | |
is the Mastodon web app. If you're on a phone, you can usually add | |
the web app to your homescreen and treat it like any other app. | |
There are many iOS and Android apps for Mastodon as well. When | |
logging into an app make sure you are logging into your server. | |
The official Mastodon apps (which are fine) tend to try and guide | |
users to sign up for a new account on Mastodon.social. It's deranged. | |
If you use the official Mastodon app for Android or iOS, make sure | |
you to select Log In and enter your server name: | |
gopher://tilde.pink/I/~bencollver/log/2025-02-10-counterforce-guide-to-mastodon… | |
Our current favorite apps are Tusky for Android and Ice Cubes for | |
iOS, but there are many others. One nice thing about Mastodon is you | |
can try different apps until you find one that works for you. Again, | |
"it's like e-mail"–-to access your e-mail, you can use Apple Mail, | |
Gmail in the browser, or Thunderbird (nerd). | |
## The Home Feed | |
The home feed on Mastodon shows all the posts, replies and boosts | |
from accounts you follow (from anywhere in the Fediverse!). | |
You just signed up and maybe you followed a few suggested accounts, | |
but your home feed is gonna be pretty empty. There is no algorithm to | |
feed you content. Mastodon does not give a fuck if you look at it or | |
not. | |
In my experience, a lot of people get stuck here. Being used to | |
treating social media as passive entertainment, it's a real shock to | |
suddenly have agency over what you see and follow. If you need a busy | |
feed to stay engaged with this adventure on the Fediverse | |
(understandable!) then try to follow early and follow often. Follow | |
anyone who seems even remotely interesting. Their posts will start | |
populating your feed and you'll also see things they boost. You can | |
always unfollow the stinkers later. | |
# Finding Each Other | |
To find your friends, first talk to your friends. Ask them if they | |
have a Mastodon/Fediverse account and add them. Ask them for | |
recommendations on who to follow! | |
## The Search Bar | |
The Mastodon search bar lets you search for other users and accounts | |
to follow. Just typing in part of an account name will work if your | |
server has seen that account before. Sometimes you have paste full | |
account with server name (like @[email protected]). | |
You can also paste links for anything in the Fediverse into the | |
search bar. If someone sends you a link to a Mastodon post like: | |
https://kolektiva.social/@The_Counterforce/113681405266044162 | |
...you can just paste that in to the Mastodon search bar, and you'll | |
be able to like the post, reply, boost, or follow the account that | |
posted it. This works for any kind of Fediverse post, not just other | |
Mastodon posts. You can paste in links to Gancio calendar events, | |
PeerTube videos, Bandwagon profiles, PixelFed photos, Lemmy threads, | |
whatever, and they'll open in Mastodon. This is part of the magic of | |
the Fediverse: you can follow and interact with all kinds of "social | |
web" content from your one account. | |
## Other people's follows/followers | |
Your friends' friends might be your friends. Check out the | |
follows/followers of accounts you like to find other accounts to | |
follow. Note that users can choose to hide this information, so you | |
won't always be able to see it! | |
## The Profile Directory | |
Some Mastodon servers will have a Profile Directory with a list of | |
accounts on that server, and other accounts the server has seen. Only | |
users that have opted-in will show up here. If you discover another | |
server that looks cool, browse its Profile Directory and copy and | |
paste people's accounts into your Mastodon search bar to find and | |
follow them! | |
gopher://tilde.pink/I/~bencollver/log/2025-02-10-counterforce-guide-to-mastodon… | |
## Other Feeds | |
Mastodon has other feeds or timelines besides the Home Feed. On the | |
web app, these are under Live Feeds as "This Server" and "Other | |
Servers". Different apps might call them the Local Timeline and | |
Global Timeline. | |
"This Server" or the Local Timeline shows you public posts from | |
everyone else on your server. It's like your local neighborhood's | |
stream of consciousness. If you are on a small cool server, this feed | |
can be great - an easy way to keep up with what's happening on your | |
server without needing to follow everyone. | |
"Other Servers" or the Global Timeline shows you all kinds of public | |
posts from all over the Fediverse. What shows up here will be | |
somewhat curated by the other people on your server and what they | |
follow and interact with. | |
## Hashtags | |
You can follow hashtags and get any tagged posts your server sees | |
will show up in your home feed. | |
## Explore | |
The Explore page will show you a selection of hashtags, posts, and | |
accounts from across the Fediverse that your server knows about. | |
There's not much of an algorithm here. In my experience it's just | |
kind of some random stuff from your corner of the Fediverse. | |
## Note on finding new accounts | |
I've referenced a few times that what you see in Mastodon can depend | |
on what your server "knows about" or has "seen already." The | |
Fediverse is a huge network and your little server doesn't have a | |
copy of the entire thing on-hand. It only grabs the data it needs. If | |
you look up an account your server has never seen before, you won't | |
see the history of posts unless you go to look at the profile outside | |
Mastodon (in a web browser). Mastodon usually gives you a link to do | |
this. Look for "Browse more on the original profile" or | |
"Open original page". | |
Once you've followed such an account, subsequent new posts will show | |
up in your Home feed. | |
# Get Found | |
If you want people to find your Mastodon account here are some tips: | |
## Introduction | |
When you are ready, make a post tagged with #introduction and share a | |
bit about yourself and what kinda of stuff you want to post or see. | |
If the account is for a band, distro, or other project or explain the | |
purpose of the account. People will see your #introduction post and | |
follow you and boost the post if they like your vibe. | |
## Boosts and Hashtags | |
There is no recommendation algorithm on Mastodon. The primary way | |
stuff spreads between people is through boosting and hashtags. | |
Anything that you think other people should share, boost it! And use | |
appropriate hashtags if you want strangers to find a given post (just | |
don't be spammy). | |
Also, note that liking a post doesn't do anything to contribute to it | |
showing up in anyone's feed–-it just lets the author know you | |
liked/saw their post! | |
## Discoverability | |
Mastodon lets you choose how discoverable you want your account to | |
be. Look under "Preferences" -> "Public Profile" -> "Privacy and Reach" | |
to set this up. For example, you can choose whether you want your | |
account to be listed in your server's Profile Directory. | |
## Your Profile On The Web | |
Earlier, I mentioned that a Mastodon account can be like a free | |
website since anyone can view your profile and public posts without | |
being logged in (or without any account at all). | |
Here's the link for The Counterforce's profile on the web: | |
https://kolektiva.social/@The_Counterforce | |
If you try loading that in a browser on your phone, it might load in | |
your Mastodon app. But if someone loads it in a browser that isn't | |
logged in to Mastodon, they will see a webpage with our profile and | |
recent public posts. No pop-up telling them to log in to see more. | |
Your profile will have a similar link, like | |
https://counterforce.social/@somepunk | |
Punk-tip: If you read my RSS How-to For Punks and are using an RSS | |
reader, then you'll want to know that every Mastodon account also has | |
an RSS feed of public posts. Just add .rss to the profile link! | |
RSS How-to For Punks | |
## Publishing Levels | |
Mastodon lets you control the visibility for every post. Public and | |
Quiet public (or Unlisted) are essentially public. For example, posts | |
of both type will be visible to someone not logged in who looks at | |
the "Your Profile On The Web" link described above. | |
Followers posts will only go to people who follow you elsewhere on | |
the Fediverse. You can choose who follows you if you like (see | |
"Privacy" next). | |
Finally, the Specific people option is the equivalent of a DM. There | |
aren't true DMs on Mastodon (use Signal). But if you want to post | |
something only for certain people, just mention them by @ in a | |
Specific people post and only they will see it. | |
# Privacy | |
Maybe you don't want to be found. You can lock your account on | |
Mastodon so that new followers have to be approved by you. Uncheck | |
"Automatically accept new followers" on the "Privacy and Reach" | |
preferences page. Remember that your future and past public posts are | |
still visible to anyone, but any Follower-only posts you make will be | |
private. You make Followers-only your default for new posts under | |
"Preferences" -> "Options". | |
In general, just remember that the Fediverse is part of the public | |
internet. Your public posts are public. That's great if you are | |
trying to get the word out about your project or band! But if you | |
want some more control, lock your account and post Followers-only. If | |
you have more concerns about this, check out Mastodon Opsec. | |
Mastodon Opsec | |
# Safety | |
Mastodon has lots of ways to protect yourself (or just deal with | |
annoying people). You can: | |
* Mute people forever, or with a time limit so you don't forget to | |
un-mute them (like a timeout for someone on an annoying shitposting | |
rampage). | |
* Block people. | |
* Block entire servers. | |
* Report users/posts on your own server that break your servers | |
guidelines. Your local mods will deal with them. | |
* Report users/posts from other servers that might be harmful or | |
dangerous to your fellow users. | |
* Mute words/phrases (e.g. if you don't like hearing about the ska | |
revival, you can just mute "ska"). | |
* Block notifications from people you don't follow. | |
* Hide boosts from annoying people who boost too much dumb shit. | |
* Auto-delete your posts after a certain time has passed. | |
If you want to learn more about Mastodon, check out the official | |
docs. If you have a question, try asking it on Mastodon! Maybe with | |
the #AskFedi hashtag. | |
Official Mastodon Documentation | |
# Bluesky is not it | |
As I am writing this, a lot of people are leaving Twitter and | |
Instagram for Bluesky, another social media alternative. You may have | |
even seen Bluesky mentioned alongside Mastodon as part of the | |
Fediverse or the "new decentralized social media". | |
Bluesky is currently just Twitter Jr. It was originally a Twitter | |
spin-off! It's now in the honeymoon phase where it has lots of cash | |
from investors, so it can develop features really fast and it hasn't | |
started running ads. The nazis haven't taken over yet. But Bluesky | |
isn't any different then Twitter or Instagram, it is just earlier in | |
the lifecycle of corporate social media. Eventually it will have to | |
make money (a lot of money), and when that pressure kicks in things | |
will get shitty. | |
The idea that Bluesky is "decentralized" comes from the fact that it | |
is built using a protocol similar to (but not compatible with) what | |
runs the Fediverse. Without getting into the technical details, here | |
is the short explanation: | |
* Currently there is only one Bluesky server. There is no | |
decentralization. You can't join a server that is local to you, run | |
by your friends, or aligned with your values. You can't join any | |
other server besides bsky.social (damn, should we have chosen | |
cforce.social). | |
* You can't start your own Bluesky server. Right now there is a | |
fundraising campaign to "Save [Bluesky] From Billionaire Capture" | |
trying to raise $30,000,000 to start a single additional Bluesky | |
server. Running Counterforce.social costs $100 a year, tops. | |
Bluesky's theoretical decentralization is a way to avoid | |
accountability for nazis and other evil actors on the platform. It | |
has nothing to do with returning autonomy and control to us. They | |
are playing us for complete fools. | |
* Thanks to their different protocol, every Bluesky post is publicly | |
available. By design, no privacy is possible. AI companies are | |
already scraping every Bluesky post. Mastodon's public posts are | |
just as public, but at least with Mastodon you have the option to | |
keep some posts visible only to an audience you control. | |
BlueSky Fundraiser | |
# Other Alternatives | |
This guide has focused on the Fediverse and Mastodon, but I don't | |
want to pretend they are the only answer. The Counterforce is about | |
trying and exploring many alternatives that help the hardcore punk | |
underground escape corporate capture. | |
For one, there are plenty of ways to get on the Fediverse besides | |
Mastodon. If you prefer just-photo posts, try PixelFed. If you prefer | |
threaded discussions, try Lemmy. If you want to post long videos, get | |
on PeerTube. Set up a Fediverse-connected Gancio calendar for local | |
shows. No matter where you set up shop, everyone elsewhere on the | |
Fediverse will be able to follow you. | |
Another option for punks to connect online is to revive the local | |
message board. I grew up with punk and hardcore message boards, and I | |
remember them fondly (although I also remember all the drama). I | |
think we should be wary of huge centralized message boards, though. | |
People can be assholes when they aren't accountable to each other, | |
and relying on a single centralized server to build our entire online | |
community is doomed to fail eventually. (There are also message board | |
platforms that are part of the Fediverse). | |
Whatever alternatives you want to try, please just be mindful of | |
repeating past mistakes. Many powerful players want to capture users | |
who flee the imploding-social-media-app-of-the-week. The next shiny | |
corporate social media app will be no better for us. Whether it's | |
Discord, TikTok, Slack, or even a huge message board run by people | |
you don't know, avoid any platform, new or old, run by a | |
profit-seeking company with venture capital to burn. No good will | |
come of it. | |
Finally, I will re-iterate the other obvious alternative: do more | |
shit offline! | |
# runyourown.punk | |
I first joined the the Fediverse in 2018 or 2019 via | |
Kolektiva.social. After learning how Mastodon works and understanding | |
the potential of the Fediverse, some friends and I got together in | |
2021 and started 438punk.house, a Mastodon server for Montreal punks. | |
https://438punk.house/ | |
It was slow at first, but we've steadily grown as more and more | |
people have looked for a way to stay plugged in without using | |
Instagram (which has otherwise dominated our scene). It wasn't easy | |
to teach people something new, but friends teach friends. Now we have | |
over a hundred users posting about upcoming shows, asking for advice | |
and help, starting new bands, sharing new releases, etc. A few bands | |
have accounts. We have our own hashtags for posting updates from | |
shows and sharing what we're listening to. Some people are really | |
chatty, and some people just log on when they want to to ask a | |
question or find our what's going on this weekend. | |
We also started a Montreal "Ask A Punk" show calendar using Gancio. | |
People all over Montreal now use the calendar to find out about shows | |
(just search "Montreal Punk Shows"), but it's also part of the | |
Fediverse so punks on 438punk.house (and elsewhere on Mastodon) can | |
follow the calendar to see new shows in their feed. | |
https://montreal.askapunk.net/ | |
It doesn't cost much money or require much technical skill to set | |
this up and keep it running (any Linux nerd can handle it). We got in | |
early and established our own autonomous infrastructure for our punk | |
scene. As more people are actively trying to ditch Instagram, | |
Montreal punks already have somewhere to go. | |
The 438punk.house server is great for us, but we're kind of the only | |
punk scene on Mastodon. We know a few other punks scattered here and | |
there but if you read this guide and get on Mastodon, look us up! But | |
mostly we are just waiting for another city to get on here and build | |
the punk Fediverse. | |
Come join us! | |
Let's grow something better | |
tags: counterculture,technical | |
# Tags | |
counterculture | |
technical |