William D. Jones is a user on mastodon.social. You can follow them or interact with them if you have an account anywhere in the fediverse. If you don't, you can sign up here.

hypothesis: if too many early users sign up on mastodon.social instead of other instances, federation will end up becoming a second-class feature. (imagine what email today would look like if gmail had existed in the 90s.)

other instances need to be able to compete with mastodon.social for growth, or github.com/tootsuite/mastodon/ should be implemented.

@bcrypt Federation will never be 2nd class feature for me.

@Gargron @bcrypt I think that "too many users" is subjective (apart from scaling). If anyone thinks there are too many users around here, or too many douches, they can either move one, or run their own instance. This way, putting more pressure on any system, could help to balance the power over the federation as a whole.

Thoughts?

@tim @Gargron i am reminded of mako.cc/copyrighteous/google-h as an example of too-many-users-on-one-node-of-a-supposedly-federated-system

@bcrypt @tim I have closed down registration on this instance to prevent this

@Gargron @tim i feel that was the right choice. i would like to run an instance but don't want the burden of maintaining it forever; giving users a migration strategy is a deal breaker for me running one

@bcrypt Why is a migration strategy a deal breaker?

@cr1901 see the part of the sentence before the semicolon

William D. Jones @cr1901

@bcrypt I think I'm missing something obvious. Wouldn't giving users a migration strategy mean that you *don't* intend to run an instance forever? Or is a migration strategy a recurring burden as long as you run the instance.

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