Mastodon and the Fediverse is too noisy. Why? : journal.jatan.space
@manton This blog post wasnāt intended to be an endorsement of Micro.blog and yet thatās what it turned into. I guess that in itself is an endorsement! š
@moonmehta Oh yeah, I didnāt read it as an endorsement exactly but my link does make it sound like that. Guess Iām always promoting. š
@manton Just realized that you blogged about it. Checking the timestamps, I now see that my reply here was before I saw your post about mine! š
@z428 I see what you mean. Leaving a reply, even if a short one, does take some getting used to in the absence of likes and boosts. But it presents enough friction that I consider to be good long term. Between likes and boosts though, if I were to kill one, Iād do away with likes at least since boosts send a relatively stronger signal. In either case, if they are useful to know as a poster, why donāt social networks just make them private?
@moonmehta @z428 I feel exactly the same as @moonmehta does about the productive friction of repliesābut if there are going to be likes and boosts, Iād prefer not to see them as a reader or a writer, and in any case should be given that choice. Even the āI-would-have-clicked-a-star-but-it-is-missing-hereā replies mean far more to me than a like, which is just a too-easy and, for me, a mostly meaningless gesture, oriented more toward dopamine levers than interaction. Boosts are somewhat different, I suppose, as long as they arenāt used algorithmically.
@moonmehta @z428 But, I hasten to add, this is purely my personal perspective. Other folks value things differently and I do not mean to slight them. Iām reminded of the lengths Iāve had to go through with some client-side browser scripting (with TamperMonkey) to hide metrics from the web interfaces of a few smaller platforms I use. At this point in life, for example, I am not interested in knowing how many times a newsletter was opened, how many subscribers I have, etc. I donāt mind that all those things are there, but I wish it were conveniently optional to hide and/or remove those options and their display.
@z428 What if likes and boosts of people you follow are wholly separated out into distinct tabs, and likes you get made private? That seems like a better way to still have that interaction type but not at the cost of them affecting the main timeline and their profile views.
@clorgie Yes, thatās exactly what Iām trying to convey. Sure, we may miss some interactions here and there but it comes at its own costs of time spent on unwanted or meh gestures. If some people and discovery are really worth it, Iām certain they surface at some point organically via Replies or otherwise.
Cc @z428
@z428 I would love for that to happen: disabling the favorite and boost buttons itself if I set it as such. Letās federate that! I have no idea about its technical feasibility either though.
@moonmehta I am with you on āno displaying any metricsā but the platform has to be designed that way. I like Micro.blog for that reason. Most people say, if you donāt like it, you can hide it. But I think by then the damage is done. Simply having those engagement metrics changes peoplesās behavior on those platforms.
Even people on Micro.blog that are mostly metrics-averse still ask for public likes, emoji reactions, etc. and the analytics services are popular among many bloggers here. My thought is simple - if you have a reaction, you will write a comment even if itās one word. Otherwise, itās fine if you read it, nodded along, and moved on. I shouldnāt need to see every reaction.
BTW, I disagree about hashtags. Itās a good discovery and aggregation tool (like tags). But as long as the platform doesnāt display them in trends (ergo no associated popularity or engagement metrics) and limits the number you can include per post (to avoid the hashtag jungle below each Instagram post). Micro.blog doesnāt have it due to harassment concerns but I think Quote Post/Tweet is more responsible.
> Simply having those engagement metrics changes peoplesās behavior on those platforms.
I concur.
> My thought is simple - if you have a reaction, you will write a comment even if itās one word. Otherwise, itās fine if you read it, nodded along, and moved on. I shouldnāt need to see every reaction.
Yep, exactly. People often give the analogy of reading facial reactions when conversing in person but that doesnāt even scale well to a stage talk, much less to your whole list of followers and potential readers on the whole social network and the Web. It also doesnāt scale in time. Facial reactions are real-time whereas likes and boosts can continue to nag over time.
Hashtags: Yeah, Iām fine with, say, one tag. IIRC Threads has that feature of only allowing one tag per post?
> Itās a good discovery and aggregation tool
What if a social network exposed a search option for whatever words you select in a post? Similar to how browsers have it except in this case it will be for the network.
> What if a social network exposed a search option for whatever words you select in a post?
That works, but then, when discussing a topic, everyone must use it in their post in context. That can be limiting in micro-posts. Plus, hashtags can be used creatively. E.g., I once tweeted - Glad I checked the inside of my shoe before putting it on. #scorpion.
BTW, I forgot to mention that Glass shows who your followers are but doesnāt list the count. Only someone who is really metrics-focused will try to count them. That level of friction achieves the purpose.
> BTW, I forgot to mention that Glass shows who your followers are but doesnāt list the count. Only someone who is really metrics-focused will try to count them. That level of friction achieves the purpose.
Thatās nice. It would work well for many Mastodon servers too, I presume. Iām surprised enough Mastodon servers have not been experimenting with having such stats as not being shown by default.
@moonmehta Guess you have people who migrate from Twitter and throw a fit until Mastodon or any other platform duplicates the entire Twitter UI. They arenāt open to an alternate way.
@pratik Iāve been seeing the same thing happening on Bluesky. They recognize Twitterās addictions and weaponizing of it to be problematic but still expect the same engagement that only an algorithm can sustainably provide.
@pratik Nice design touch, that last. Tangentially, I think exploring who follows someone else is a good way to explore the network, but Iām glad MB doesnāt provided a way for me to view my own followers. At least, thatās how I experience it and please donāt enlighten me if there is a way LOL