I’m not going to make a big paragraph to explain myself but here are the positive points:

  • No advertising
  • Diversified applications
  • Very good freedom of expression
  • Fedivers
  • Verification (using a website)

Now negative points:

  1. I was sold instances that served as a mirror with X which would have facilitated integration into Mastodon for users like me. Only 2% of the accounts I follow on X are on Mastodon (Mozilla, Proton).

  2. There are not really « fun » accounts like https://x.com/humansnocontext that post funny video clips, I find Mastodon a little too serious, I see a lot of political accounts and sometimes the lives of normal people like mine. It’s a shame 😕. I mean, I chose Lemmy because it’s so much more diverse!

  3. You cannot change your username. It’s a shame about that…

Well, that was my opinion on Mastodon.

If you have recommendations, favorites of Mastodon accounts, share them with me.

  • MacedWindow@lemmy.world
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    16 days ago

    I use Mastodon but my main issue is the like of interaction. Even large accounts with many followers receive almost zero likes or boosts on their posts. Makes it feel like thousands of people shouting into the same void and trying not to make eye contact.

    • aleph@lemm.ee
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      16 days ago

      This is exactly it for me, too. Despite having significantly more users than Lemmy, Mastodon still feels much less social.

      Case in point: I went looking for journalists to follow, because that’s one of the main uses I had for Twitter, but found almost none. Of the few I did find, almost no one was interacting with their posts at all. I even saw one journalist post a plea to her followers to boost, like, or just do something because she was on the point of giving up due to the lack of response she was getting. It was sad, quite honestly.

      There needs to be a way to help users find content to engage with that doesn’t require an algorithm to force feed it down people’s throats.