I've seen questions like... Is there an #anime instance? The answer is generally... No.
Users tend to be spread across a large number of instances and they might have a similar interest.
I looked into one instance which *marketed* itself as one and as ironically "non toxic" ("urusai"), and I saw high school bully type posts from *the admin* attacking large swathes of the community and sowing discord.
At other times, there would be a few other users from this community engaging in *concern trolling* on tags. This instance tends to be buds ("our sister instance") with the instance ("sakurajima"), less overtly trollish but if you dig into it, you can still find it, and I tend to lump them in together.
The instance known as hachyderm is also known to shield Facebook shills (who even work for a Facebook executive by the name of Stamos) who are quite literally just there to denigrate the fediverse and stir up trouble.
They don't merely host them. They shield them.
I generally don't comment on these because I'm not that interested in internet drama and all that hubbub but I figured it might be worth knowing about them.
Even with the fediverse, there are a few instances to be cautious of.
One is hachyderm which is run by a British company. It's an instance which engages in petty drama and I would caution someone against using it. It has a veneer of professionalism which might make it appealing to a few.
Another one is universeodon which appears to have been bought out (or something) by a British admin. Petty drama, petty admin drama. Once again, I would caution someone against using it.
.world appears to be a petty censorship instance.
.art is run by a British admin. It is notorious for drama.
There are probably more, but these are ones which immediately come to mind, and they are also ones which someone might overlook as being bad.
The bigger issue that people complain about is that Bluesky moderation can be trigger happy.
https://9to5mac.com/2024/10/25/bluesky-paid-subscription/ People see this as kind of the smoking gun but it isn't surprising that a platform would want some way to make money.
Maybe, host in the U.S. It's a nice central location between Asia and Europe, I don't know how good the infrastructure between Asia and Europe is. Also, it's cheap.
It appears to have started off as someone's simple C wrapper for rendering webpages and ended up being used for a lot more by a lot more people. This is why so many functions look like they have been plucked right out of C.
I'm not going to use Wordpress. I'm honestly tired of Wordpress.
I don't really want to be troubleshooting (or writing extensions for) 20 year old PHP legacy code. I'd like to play with something which uses a more modern stack than that.
Even for something hosted, after the parent company bought Tumblr for a low price, they've been doing a poor job of moderation, still being censorious. Plus, I'd like to play with something more modern and fresh, it doesn't have to be something hot off the press, but not the same thing from twenty years ago.
Software Engineer. Psy / Tech / Sex Science Enthusiast. Controversial?
Free Expression. Human rights / Civil Liberties. Anime. Liberal.