Just found this article, an excellent read!
"Over the past few years, Mastodon has become the model for a friendlier kind of social network, promising to keep out the hateful or ugly content that proliferates on larger and more centralized networks. Journalists hailed it as “Twitter without Nazis” and for years, it’s generally lived up to that promise. But last week, the social network Gab migrated to Mastodon — and Mastodon’s admins have been forced to deal with the internet’s Nazi problem head-on."
@salad_bar_breath 😄 I am glad you enjoyed the article too! And I found another really good reference from it -- will post a separate new thread soon, to give it more exposure.
Hint : it's a well argued analysis on why keeping communities small is the best way to make them productive and healthy. 😉
@chrism Very true, Chris.
I have read another article on how that group has appropriated another open source project's work, the bravo browser, and 'forked it' to use for their own interests.
The developers of Bravo were livid, but with it being open source project they couldn't bar this from happening.
Surprises me that people would trust such a sensitive tool as a browser, and use one provided (built as a binary, an .exe) by a group that could use that as a surveillance tool, with even less scruples than Google .
@realcaseyrollins Thanks, glad you liked the article.