• sbv@sh.itjust.works
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    15 hours ago

    Twitter is very friendly to influencers because it automatically boosts popular posts and hashtags. Mastodon doesn’t by design, so they’re gonna have a much, much harder time there.

    That’s an okay decision to take, but it makes it hard to grow the network because there’s a lower financial incentive.

    • MajorHavoc@programming.dev
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      13 hours ago

      Mastodon doesn’t by design, so they’re gonna have a much, much harder time there.

      In theory, yes. But what early switching folks are reporting is that the total impressions are much lower on Mastodon, but the total engagement is much higher, for the same effort.

      Which is confusing unless we factor in what we know about Twitter farming bot account on purpose to create a false appearance of success.

      Of course, there’s still the matter of Twitter genuinely has orders of magnitude more users. So as an either/or proposition, no way does it, yet, make sense to ditch Twitter for Mastodon.

      But for the value-to-reach ratio, with the same effort applied to both, anyway, Mastodon is actually already a better value than Twitter.

      All that to say, yeah, Twitter is better, purely due to the user base, and Mastodon’s algorithm actually treats creators better. Which we kind of already knew, as it was created by people fed up with Twitters abusive algorithms.

    • pivot_root@lemmy.world
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      12 hours ago

      Mastodon doesn’t by design

      There is a trending section, and it does boost popular tags based on user interaction. It doesn’t shovel crap into personal feeds like traditional social media, but it’s not entirely lacking discovery features either.