The EU Law Empowering Social Media Users to Quietly Quit Algorithms
A silent revolution is sweeping across social spheres, spearheaded by a groundbreaking EU law that is reshaping the way social media users interact...
7 min read
Writing Team : Aug 6, 2024 2:29:26 PM
Social media users are facing significant challenges today. They're frustrated by changeable algorithms or having their data sold to the highest bidder. The idea that, should a platform move in a direction they don't like (as is the case with some disillusioned folks on X/Twitter) or disappear from the market completely (which could happen with a potential U.S. TikTok ban), leaving the network means abandoning everything they've worked so hard to build there.
Content, poof. Audience, bye-bye.
But with all the bad comes so much good: the ability to share your life and work with billions of users worldwide, an outlet for creative expression, the possibility of monetizing your passion, and, perhaps most importantly, the ability to share and connect with family and friends.
Most social media users — especially those leveraging the networks to boost visibility for themselves, their businesses, or their work — accept that the good of social media goes hand-in-hand with the bad.
But what if there was an alternative?
As it happens, there are several. A wave of new social media platforms has swept onto the market in recent months, offering solutions to many of the problems mentioned above. They're federated, decentralized, and growing fast.
While it might feel like it burst onto the scene in 2023/24, decentralized social media isn't all that new. The first decentralized platform, Diaspora, launched back in 2010. It promised users freedom, privacy, and control of their own data. Despite initial excitement and a successful crowdfunding campaign, Diaspora struggled to gain mainstream traction. Their platform still exists and currently has around 850,000 users.
In 2016, Mastodon, an open-source and decentralized microblogging platform, was launched. This was closely followed by Steemit, Pixelfed, Lens Protocol, and several others. Like Diaspora, these networks initially struggled to gain traction — until now. The advent of blockchain technology and growing disillusionment with traditional social networks have reignited interest in decentralization.
2023, in particular, saw a steep rise in interest in decentralized social media options — and a much-talked-about phenomenon called the fediverse. Rather than sputtering and lying dormant, these platforms and new ones like them are slowly, steadily (and sometimes in great spurts that correlate to changes on mainstream platforms) growing their user bases.
Mastodon, Pixelfed (an Instagram alternative), PeerTube (a YouTube alternative), and an ever-growing ecosystem are built with an open protocol called ActivityPub. This connection makes them interoperable (read: able to talk to each other). All platforms built with ActivityPub are considered to be part of the fediverse (federation + universe).
ActivityPub is worth getting excited about. It's an old standard based on even older ideas about a fundamentally different structure for social networking, one that's much more like email or old-school web chat than any of the platforms we use now. It's governed by open protocols, not closed platforms. It aims to give control back to users and to make sure that the social web is bigger than any single company.
Even Meta's Threads have plugged into the fediverse, though they themselves aren't decentralized.
Another key player in the decentralized social movement, Bluesky, was launched in 2021. Interestingly, Bluesky has Twitter to thank for its inception — work on the platform started in 2019 when Twitter announced the company was funding a small team of researchers to build an "open and decentralized standard for social media."
This makes things a little complicated, so bear with me: Even though Bluesky is decentralized and aligns philosophically with many of the fediverse ideals, Bluesky is not part of the fediverse because it isn't interoperable with ActivityPub platforms like Mastodon.
Unlike the major networks, decentralized social media is not owned and controlled by one colossal tech giant. Instead of data being controlled by a single company, it is distributed across a network of computers, often run by individual users or independent organizations.
This means there is no single point of control or failure, which, in theory, boosts privacy and reduces the risk of censorship. It's like having your cake, eating it, and then realizing your cake can't be stolen because it's everywhere and nowhere at the same time.
Users retain control over their data, deciding what to share and with whom. This contrasts sharply with centralized platforms that often monetize user data.
With no central authority to dictate content rules, decentralized platforms can be more resistant to censorship. This is particularly appealing in regions with restrictive regimes.
Decisions about platform changes and policies can be made through democratic processes involving the community rather than top-down directives from corporate executives.
The movement to return to the open web of the 1990s is noteworthy. The Internet was built upon open standards — HTTP, URL, TCP/IP, DNS, HTML. A vast number of valuable internet businesses have been built on these 'shoulders of giants'.
ActivityPub and AT Protocol are built with open standards philosophies and could similarly enable a new playground of innovation, with openness, ownership, and interoperability at their core.
Open standards in social media could be as powerful as open standards have been for direct and private communication (email). What's exciting about the development of these open standards, and more importantly, the adoption of them and the traction of social networks which support them, is that they can bring forth a new era of open standards for the web.
If ActivityPub or AT Protocol were to take off, we could see a hundred different apps for Snapchat or Instagram or X instead of just one, a dozen companies competing to build the best moderation tools, and an app store filled with different ways for users to follow and be followed by other people on the internet.
It doesn't make sense that we have a dozen usernames, a dozen profiles, a dozen sets of fans and friends. All that stuff should belong to the user, and they should be able to access it and interact with it anywhere and everywhere.
Creators will likely be skeptical of these new networks, and understandably so. Follower count is still currency, especially if you're looking to monetize. It makes sense to choose your primary platform based on the largest potential audience you can reach.
TikTok, for example, with its ever-growing monthly active user count of 1.5 billion, is particularly appealing — but the risk of placing all your eggs in that basket shouldn't be ignored. If the ban goes ahead and the platform is removed from U.S. app stores, even creators outside the region could lose hundreds of thousands of followers, not to mention all their content.
The promise of decentralized networks, if they live up to their vision, means your audience, no matter where it lives, is yours. Tech experts often liken it to email — even if you leave Gmail, you'll still have access to all your contacts there. Your eggs are in many baskets. If you abandon one, there are others.
This new reality could mean a powerful mindset shift for creators. Rather than thinking of yourself as, say, an Instagram creator, a YouTube creator, or LinkedIn creator, you're an image creator, a video creator, a writer. It's an empowering paradigm shift that means your content is always yours, whatever audience you build with that work belongs to you.
It's worth pointing out that there's no better time to get active on a network than when it experiences its initial spike in interest. Right now is a very specific moment in time because there's an opportunity to be part of multiple new social networks that are growing rapidly. Getting in on the ground floor is a huge benefit.
For those wary of adding yet another platform to their social media stack, it's worth noting that social media management tools that allow for crossposting do streamline this process a great deal. Posts for LinkedIn, for example, can be easily converted to a simpler thread that might work on Threads or Bluesky.
In completely anecdotal terms, these decentralized networks tend to be more focused on community and discussion rather than the attention economy that has emerged on mainstream platforms in recent years.
With platforms like Bluesky offering the ability to create your own algorithm and Mastodon doing away with them completely, there's less of a sense of "playing the game" to have a real impact on your social media content, which has been necessary for so many brands and creators to gain visibility for their work.
Of course, building up an audience (or, in this case, community) is still important for many, but engaging meaningfully with comments or even weighing in on someone else's content can be just as powerful for getting noticed as creating a jaw-dropping video.
Despite these obvious advantages, decentralized social media has some serious mountains to climb.
The biggest problem? Finding users. While these networks are growing fast, a couple of million users is nothing compared to the colosses that are Facebook (over 3 billion monthly active users), YouTube (2.5 billion), and Instagram (2 billion).
Bluesky has 6 million users, around 1.1 million of whom are active monthly. Mastodon has 7.4 million users (in total; monthly active user stats are unavailable), PeerTube has 356K, and Pixelfed 255K. FediDB reports that there are 19 million ActivityPub users. It's a lot, but not near tipping point.
Network effects are crucial for social media success — people go where their friends are. Since most social media users are more concerned with keeping up with their favorite brands and friends, and most of them have yet to migrate, the lure of these networks is not enough for most users.
Usability is another issue. Decentralized platforms tend to require more technical know-how, making them less accessible to the average user. Despite Mastodon's success, it's a tricky platform to get to grips with. It's worth noting that Bluesky is actively tackling this with a huge focus on the easy-to-understand interface and features like starter packs, which users can create themselves to help onboard others.
Additionally, while platforms like Bluesky are implementing user-lead safety controls, the lack of centralized moderation can lead to the proliferation of harmful content, posing a risk to user safety and platform reputation.
Given these challenges, it's unlikely that decentralized social media will completely replace mainstream platforms in the near future — though after months of innovation and steady growth, it seems unlikely they'll go anywhere.
What seems far more likely is that we'll move towards more of a hybrid system of mainstream platforms and decentralized ones, with the latter seeing a noticeable boost every time an older platform changes their algorithm or makes changes that ruffle feathers.
Additionally, niche communities and specific use cases may thrive on decentralized platforms, offering users alternatives without requiring a complete abandonment of centralized networks.
So, while decentralized platforms are making waves, don't delete your Instagram just yet — claiming your handle on Bluesky/Mastodon/Pixelfed profile, is a wise choice, too.
We might also see mainstream platforms making tweaks to their networks in the hope of meeting fediverse users where they are, as Meta did with Threads. Even major tech CEOs are vocal about the importance of the movement. The idea is that not everyone wants to use one product, and making it so that they can use an alternative but can still interact with people on the network will make it so that that product also is more valuable.
Let's be real: if major tech companies can't build and maintain the One True Social Network For Everybody, nobody can. It's well past time to try something else.
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