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Chris Trottier

I will say this much, though.

Every day that journalists stay on Twitter and refuse to join the Fediverse is a day they're not impacting the ongoing development of the Fediverse.

Which is something I know that a whole lot of journalists will eventually regret.

Is it better to be a leader or a follower? When it comes to social media, few journalists are being leaders.

19 comments
DELETED

@atomicpoet Dude, you say all the right things, but it's easier to hang on to someone's tail than to hang on to their beard.

Chris Trottier

Now I want to highlight a bunch of journalists who actually are being leaders in the domain of social media: @TexasObserver

The weren't just one of the first publications to join the Fediverse, but the first to start their own server too.

A few weeks ago, the organization was nearly shut down due to lack of funding.

But here again, they became innovators by using the Fediverse to crowdfund -- and thus save -- @TexasObserver.

In doing this, they may have validated a new model for funding!

Chris Trottier

Later today, I'm actually hosting a roundtable on Fediverse crowdfunding.

I've had this roundtable planned weeks in advance.

As a software dev, I've been thinking about further possibilities for baking crowdfunding into Fediverse platforms -- making it easier for organizations to fund their social media pursuits.

Then last week, @TexasObserver gave me my first case study for crowdfunding's potential.

Chris Trottier

As @TexasObserver demonstrates, crowdfunding could be a domain for journalists to validate through the Fediverse.

It could be a means of freeing them not only from Big Social, but also the private equity firms that have gutted local reporting for decades.

There's no reason journalists couldn't run their local state or town's Fediverse server (for example).

But again, you need a few more brave journalists willing to see the potential.

Stegasaurus replied to Chris

@atomicpoet @TexasObserver Totally agree Chris. I'd like to journalists having their own dedicated severs, specialized to their needs. Steve

Jeff C. 🇺🇦 replied to Chris

@atomicpoet @TexasObserver As a fellow tech worker who works in the non-profit journalism space, I can say that having this baked into the ecosystem somehow would probably go far in getting certain newsrooms interested in the Fediverse.

ᴚ uɐᗡ replied to Chris

@atomicpoet @TexasObserver What I absolutely love about Texas Observer is that they went all in and did their own instance.

It is time for ALL REPUTABLE INSTITUTIONS to do likewise. Their journalists gain the distinction of having an account on the instance - and it makes everything easier for everyone.

Blue check? PFFFT. Bish, cheeze. 🧀 🧀 🧀

zariweya 🇪🇺💻🦝 replied to Chris

@atomicpoet @TexasObserver but in the fediverse you don't need a bluecheck to verify yourself. If you as media or entity run your own server under your registered domain and only allow self journalist accounts, that's accounts are automatically verified.

Jim Killock replied to Chris

@atomicpoet @TexasObserver On this thread:

(1) Blue checks are a small factor: the main problem is simply the built up networks of incluence

(2) If other networks of influence emerge, then journalists will engage

(3) Social power and knowledge ports, even if whole networks cannot be moved intact; this will become more obvious to people over time

(3) The Fediverse cannot resist / remove, only ameliorate factors of power, so the sacrifice is never as large as all that

DAME Magazine

@atomicpoet We'd love to listen in if it's going to be a public roundtable?

Chris Trottier replied to DAME

@damemagazine Yes, it’s happening at 8PM PST/11PM EST. DM me your email address, and I’ll send you a calendar invite to the Jitsi meeting.

Ernie Smith

@atomicpoet @TexasObserver Chris, there have been a lot of layoffs lately. I'm one of many, tbh. I love the fediverse and support its goals. I think your point is important.

We should leverage those layoffs to build some editorial entrepreneurship around these parts.

I was around in 2009 and 2010 on Twitter and remember how much breaking news really drove it. We need that wave around these parts.

Nate Gaylinn

@atomicpoet @TexasObserver What sets Mastodon apart is the focus on personal autonomy, and we should double down on that. Let's help content creators, social movements, and people in need connect and support each other financially.

Troll

@atomicpoet Please highlight the influential trolls on this platform next, Chris! The trolls on Twitter enjoy a much higher social status, and this can be a harsh, unforgiving place for us.

William Robison

@atomicpoet @TexasObserver I hope it is. The corporate ownership model of journalism is crashing. Specially when it comes to local news.

Shoq

@atomicpoet Did they track the metrics of the crowd funding, to know where most of the donor prospects were funneled in from?

Lino Morales

@atomicpoet This is why I want to see more Conservative journos out here! I've not found any.

Michael Fisher

@atomicpoet I’m not a journalist, just an ordinary guy who enjoys keeping a finger on the pulse of what’s happening around me in the world. That said — the moment Musk removed the ban on our just-indicted ex-President, I began setting up a presence here on Mastodon. That was the first clear signal of the direction (⬇️ 🚽 ) that things were heading over there. And yes, it is certainly good to get in early on something new and growing with miles of potential still ahead of it.

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