I want to write an article that answers the question ‘Why should YOU join the Fediverse?’, which would basically be an exhaustive list of arguments for joining the Fediverse, each argument linked to an article/publication that illustrates it. I’ll translate it into several languages.

Can you help me?

  • missingno@fedia.io
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    7 hours ago

    No one CEO can ruin it.

    Right now we’re seeing a cycle of people jumping ship from one corporate-owned platform to another, until that new platform inevitably turns to shit. But as long as people keep doing that, corporate-owned platforms will inevitably turn to shit. The only true solution is to cut corporations out of the picture with platforms that are designed to be unruinable.

  • Geodad@lemm.ee
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    8 hours ago

    Because they were banned from Reddit for saying that “If you have the chance to punch a Nazi, you should always punch the Nazi.” 😅

  • Max-P@lemmy.max-p.me
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    10 hours ago

    Good luck with “exhaustive” because people have different unique reasons to come to the fediverse. It would be a very long list.

    For the average user I’d approach it with points that affects everyone:

    • We can’t have a Twitter-style take over
    • We can’t have a Reddit API disaster
    • It’s distributed so while parts of the fediverse come and go, you’ll never lose the platform as a whole.
    • It’s distributed geographically so one hostile country can’t silence information from other countries like Facebook and Twitter are doing.
    • No algorithms designed to keep you scrolling forever
    • No ads or commercial content being pushed by the algorithm
    • Loads of choices for instances and moderation style for everyone’s taste.
    • Users get to choose how they want to browse and with which apps: you’re not stuck with the latest crappy redesign you hate. You’ll never be forced to have reels and stories in your feed if you don’t want that.
    • Not controlled by big corporations like Meta and Google, but rather the community for the community.
    • If you have sensitive communities you can own the servers to ensure it’s survival in situations where Facebook would immediately ban that page/group.
    • No bullshit AI products shoved in your face like Grok or Reddit Answers.
    • You as a user are in control of what you see and don’t see.
    • No advertiser friendly content policies forcing you to use stupid words like “unalive”, “pewpew”, “corn” or algorithmic downprioritization because you swore.
    • If you prefer to browse Instagram-like, you still get to see Twitter-like post, and you friends can see your photos from a Twitter-like interface. Or you can have a Twitter-like interface and interact with Reddit-like posts on Lemmy.

    It’s harder to onboard and figure out by the common people but it would be the final platform switch. You may move instances over time but you will never be left looking for a new platform because the old one enshittified. You just move to an instance that hasn’t, done.

      • Max-P@lemmy.max-p.me
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        10 hours ago

        Yeah the best campaigns I’ve seen for the Fediverse were reactionary to something happening on big socials: Lemmy when the API fiasco happened, Mastodon when Elon bought Twitter, recently Pixelfed to replace Instagram, and Loops the last 2 weeks before TikTok was about to get banned.

        People don’t change because it’s better, they change because they’re pissed off at their current platform.

  • JohnDClay@sh.itjust.works
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    6 hours ago

    If you use Reddit, but don’t like the direction it’s going, (more extractive, less user control) Lemmy is a good alternative. Same thing for Instagram or Twitter, pixelfed or mastodon are good alternatives for those. And they have the advantage that it’s harder to make them universally worse in the future, since the infrastructure is more distributed.

  • dukeofdummies@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    It’s constantly evolving. New communities are getting constantly added, and new servers spun up for different reasons and ethos’ are being spun up every day.

  • j4k3@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    The fediverse is the public commons of the internet; a truly democratic institutional framework unlike any commercial alternative. It is the 21st century internet of the present and the future.

  • mesamune@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    I usually just show them videos/videos without the Algorithm and a couple come on over. We also have [email protected] and that helps.

    Instead of trying to sell the Fediverse, I just sell the site without any ads. Quite a few are interested. Then I post on discord on different sources. A couple have come around. They technically dont know they are on the fedi.

  • fuzzy_feeling
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    8 hours ago

    “last week tonight” just published an episode on that topic

  • m_f@discuss.online
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    11 hours ago

    Because you’re sick of being toyed with by billionaire’s algorithms designed to wring everything last drop out of you they can.

  • m33@theprancingpony.in
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    10 hours ago

    @retiolus Foreword: I didn’t write this answer. I am currently experimenting Deepseek it is shockingly good 🙄

    Absolutely! The Fediverse is a fascinating and growing ecosystem of decentralized social networks, and there are many compelling reasons to join. Below is a structured outline of arguments for joining the Fediverse, along with suggestions for linking to articles or publications that illustrate each point. This will help you create a comprehensive and well-supported article.


    Why Should YOU Join the Fediverse?

    1. Escape Corporate Control

    • Argument: The Fediverse is decentralized, meaning no single entity controls it. You’re not subject to the whims of corporations like Meta (Facebook), Twitter, or Google.
    • Supporting Article: “The Case for Decentralized Social Media” by EFF
    • Key Point: Users have more autonomy and freedom from algorithmic manipulation.

    2. Privacy and Data Ownership

    3. Interoperability

    • Argument: The Fediverse is built on open protocols like ActivityPub, allowing different platforms (Mastodon, PeerTube, Pixelfed, etc.) to interact seamlessly.
    • Supporting Article: “What is ActivityPub and Why Does It Matter?” by Mozilla
    • Key Point: You’re not locked into a single platform; you can communicate across networks.

    4. Community-Driven Moderation

    5. No Ads or Tracking

    6. Resilience Against Censorship

    7. Diverse and Inclusive Communities

    8. Ethical and Sustainable

    9. Customizable Experience

    10. Future-Proofing the Internet

    11. No Algorithmic Feeds

    12. Global and Multilingual

    13. Support Open Standards

    14. No Paywalls or Premium Features

    15. Be Part of a Movement


    Conclusion

    The Fediverse offers a compelling alternative to traditional social media, with benefits ranging from privacy and autonomy to community and innovation. By joining, you’re not just choosing a new platform—you’re supporting a vision for a better, more open internet.


    This structure provides a mix of practical, ethical, and philosophical reasons to join the Fediverse, each backed by credible sources. You can expand on each point with personal anecdotes, user testimonials, or additional research. Let me know if you’d like help with translations or further refinements!

  • ᴇᴍᴘᴇʀᴏʀ 帝@feddit.uk
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    9 hours ago

    My pitch is:

    At the end of Web 1.0 and the start of Web 2.0 there was a rich ecosystem of forums, blogs (micro and macro), wikis, etc. However, you needed a different login for each one and the large social media companies, Big Web, saw their opportunity and made a more convenient offering - a site where everyone could go and talk to each other. That seemed great until a critical mass of people joined and then they found themselves locked into a walled garden, imprisoned by the network effect. That’s when the enshittification started.

    What the Fediverse is doing is rewinding to before the takeover by the Big Web and asking where the Small Web would have evolved to if it hadn’t been sidelined. The answer is a protocol that would allow all those sites to speak to each other. And right there are the first glimmerings of the direction we should have taken - diaspora* and Friendica started in 2010, in fact it is felt in some quarters that Google+ (2011 until it was finished off by Facebook and Google’s short attention span) lifted some features from them. Unfortunately, the Big Web smothered such innovations, and it is only now that the Fediverse’s time has come.

    The beauty of federation is you don’t have to believe someone who is running an instance if they say they won’t be evil, federation acts like a Ulysses Pact. y You can’t be evil because the barrier to moving is so much lower because the network effect doesn’t handcuff you to one instance. If an Admin starts power-tripping, you can move to another instance and carry on where you left off.

  • kbal@fedia.io
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    9 hours ago

    The centralized social media have demonstrated again and again that content moderation at scale can never work well the way they do it. They are a menace to society. The problem isn’t that Elon Musk is the wrong person to decide how a billion people should be allowed to talk to each other and which of their voices should be amplified, it’s that nobody should ever have that power.

    A diverse network of smaller instances where each is free to take its own approach is the future of social media, if it has a future.