A prehistoric animal, predecessor of the mammoth. Goes "toot."
There's a progressive metal band with the same name that I'm a fan of that brought the animal to my attention. I thought it's a pretty cool name/animal.
There are different ways in which something can be decentralized; in this case, Mastodon is the "federated" kind. Think e-mail, not BitTorrent. There are different servers (instances), users have an account on one of them, but can interact and follow each other regardless of where their account is.
We are using the OStatus suite of protocols:
- Webfinger for user-on-domain lookup
- Atom feeds with ActivityStreams, Portable Contacts, Threads extensions for the actual content
- PubSubHubbub for subscribing to Atom feeds
- Salmon for delivering certain items from the Atom feeds to interested parties such as the mentioned user, author of the status being replied to, person being followed, etc
The "flagship" instance of Mastodon, aka the server I run myself with the latest code. It's not supposed to be the only instance in the end.
Let's call it the "fediverse". It has existed for a longer while, populated by GNU social servers, Friendica, Hubzilla, Diaspora etc. Not every one of those servers is fully compatible with every other. Mastodon strives to be fully standards-compliant and compatibility with GNU social is higher in priority than the others.
While Mastodon is compatible with GNU social in terms of server to server communication, the client to server API (aka how you access Mastodon) is different. Therefore, client apps that were made for specifically GNU social will not work with Mastodon. The reason for this is half technical, half ideological.
Because Mastodon has been created from a blank slate, it is much simpler to have the API mirror internal structures as closely as possible, rather than build an emulation layer. Secondly, the GNU social client API is actually a half-way implementation of the legacy Twitter API - that's the reason why it works with some older Twitter client apps. However, many of those apps are not maintained anymore, the GNU social API does not actually keep up with the real Twitter API and never fully implemented all its features; at the same time, the Twitter API was never meant for a federated service and so obscures some of the functionality.
Development of Mastodon and hosting of mastodon.social is funded through my Patreon (also BTC/PayPal donations). Beyond that, I am not interested in VC funding, monetizing, advertising, or anything of that sort. I could offer setup/maintenance services on demand.
The software is free and open source and communities should host their own servers if they can, that way the costs are more or less distributed. Obviously it'd be hard for me to pay the bills if literally everyone decided to use the mastodon.social instance only.
It’s a group of mastodon servers that share toots with each other.
It’s a server that you can have an account on. Each has its own policies, because they can be run by anyone!
Sure, you can follow @[email protected].
It’s mastodon with two Os. You will get it wrong at least once.
Try Tusky.
Try TootyFruity.
Try Amaroq. Also, Safari might be a choice.
You can follow or contact Tusky at @[email protected], or the developers @[email protected] and @[email protected]
You can search for people and hashtags, but not general text. Use the box above the tooting area.
Click on the globe beneath your toot for privacy options, including DM.
“Local” toots are from the server you signed up at. “Federated” are the all the toots your server knows about. (It's complicated, but short version is: “toots from people that you and other locals follow.”)
Follow the esteemed @[email protected].
“CW” stands for “Content Warning.” You can use it to hide your toot, like a spoiler.
They’re tasty, and they make people smile. Just go with it.
At the moment, you will have to toot the admin of your instance for help on that one.
Click on Getting Started, then Extended Information. An info page displays. Hopefully, they put their contact information in there!
Not without a lot of clicking, sorry. But, your instance admin can do it! Please contact them.
“✅” is an emoji, only for lulz. There is no verification on Mastodon. You can copy and paste “✅” into your bio if you wish, you cheeky monkey.
No, sorry. But you could delete and rewrite...
Click "Getting Started," then "Favourites."
Not currently. You must manually copy and paste the text to quote it.
Yes you do.
Yes, some of it! It‘s under Preferences->Data export
Click their avatar pic. This will take you directly to their instance, which displays all their public toots.
Click the toot body for Expanded View. This will show threads the toot’s connected to.
Click the toot body for a Expanded View. Right-click on the date beneath the toot for a permalink.
In Firefox, right-click on your avatar picture. Select Copy link location.
Federated.
The original author.
Yes, try the excellent instance preview tool.
The developers are working on this and other filtering options, stay tuned!
Not yet, but there is a Firefox TamperMonkey script that might work for you.
By default, toots are federated (public), and will show on both timelines. You can change the default behavior through Settings->Preferences->Post Privacy.
You can file a bug or submit suggestions at Mastodon’s Issue Tracker.
Here’s more, from hardworking individuals trying to help, too.