I don't object in principle to instance admins having a lot of power, precisely because they provide the resources and you can move to some other instance whenever you want. That seems reasonable.
There's also nothing preventing you from having multiple Mastodon accounts on multiple instances, including one where you're a responsible member of society and another where you're tooting spicy politics under a pseudonym all day (and the network opts in or out of you as it prefers).
The issue is that the instance you join dictates what "being a responsible member of the society" is, and if you don't fit into the restrictions of that one particular instance, you can lose your account which you use to interact with the entire federation.
Given that Mastodon admins can read direct messages of their users and ban them based on that, this is bound to have an effect on how users on Mastodon interact.
>There's also nothing preventing you from having multiple Mastodon accounts on multiple instances
Except for the fact that people use social networks like Twitter and Facebook to represent themselves. Which means one account. Having pseudonyms defeats the purpose.
In Mastodon, the model, in essence, makes you represent the instance you joined when you speak, with its values and restrictions — not yourself.
When deviance means loss of access, that's bound to result in increase in polarization and echo-chamberism.
Correspondingly, people who run instances block entire other instances based on how they perceive them.
This takes all the problems we have with email, and makes them worse.
"You can run your own instance" is an argument that works as well as "don't like Gmail? Host your own email server!".
I wouldn't have an issue if being banned from the instance you joined still allowed you to migrate to another instance after the ban without losing any data / identity / etc.
That's to say, if your identity wasn't tied to any particular instance.
Right, because reputation isn't a thing, having people know that this account represents you isn't a thing, and so on.
There's a reason Elon Musk messing with verified accounts on Twitter was a bit of an issue.
In short, if you want people to know that an account represents you, then your account is tied to your identity, and your identity, conversely, is tied to your account.
As I said earlier, the problem with Mastodon is that your Mastodon account doesn't represent you. It represents the instance you signed up with. What you say must be filtered through that lens, and will be perceived through those lens by people who make blacklists, creating a positive feedback loop.
The instance provides the resources you consume to access Mastodon. In exchange you follow their rules.
If you don't like their rules you can move to someone else's instance or even host your own. The process seems pretty simple: https://blog.joinmastodon.org/2019/06/how-to-migrate-from-on...
I don't object in principle to instance admins having a lot of power, precisely because they provide the resources and you can move to some other instance whenever you want. That seems reasonable.
There's also nothing preventing you from having multiple Mastodon accounts on multiple instances, including one where you're a responsible member of society and another where you're tooting spicy politics under a pseudonym all day (and the network opts in or out of you as it prefers).