shakedown.social is one of the many independent Mastodon servers you can use to participate in the fediverse.
A community for live music fans with roots in the jam scene. Shakedown Social is run by a team of volunteers (led by @clifff and @sethadam1) and funded by donations.

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#bettersocialmedia

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As we celebrate the progress made this year, we are energised by the opportunities that lie ahead. Reviewing the 2024 Needs Assessment (about.iftas.org/2024/12/17/the) we see our work expanding moderation tooling and providing new and enhanced resources to further strengthen and scale trust and safety in federated social networks. Wherever possible, we will endeavour to align with projects and participants that are similarly working to create #BetterSocialMedia

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IFTAS · The 2024 IFTAS Needs Assessment Report is Here!
More from IFTAS Blog

2024 saw great things on the Fediverse. Growth, new projects, and lots of work on trust & safety.

We’ve shared an overview of the successes and amazing collaborations we’ve seen over the last year because it’s always good to celebrate the wins: about.iftas.org/2024/12/23/for .

#BetterSocialMedia #TogetherStronger
about.iftas.org/2024/12/23/for

IFTAS · Fortifying the Fediverse: Decentralised Trust and Safety 2024
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Welcoming Erin Kissane

We are thrilled to announce that Erin Kissane has joined the IFTAS Advisory Board! Erin brings a unique and deeply informed perspective on trust, safety, and governance in decentralised online spaces, making her an invaluable addition to our mission of supporting independent social media communities.

Erin’s recent work on Fediverse Governance underscores her dedication to understanding and addressing the nuanced challenges of managing decentralised networks. Her thoughtful exploration of governance models, trust-building, and community care on the Fediverse reflects her commitment to fostering equitable and inclusive online environments.

Other notable achievements include co-founding and leading the COVID Tracking Project at The Atlantic, a significant public data initiative that provided comprehensive national data during a critical time. She also played a pivotal role in establishing OpenNews, fostering collaboration among data journalists, designers, and reporters to enhance the quality of journalism through shared knowledge and resources.

Most recently, through her microstudio wreckage/salvage, Erin continues to investigate the history and future of online networks, exploring cultural protocols and innovative practices that can help sustain healthier digital spaces.

Erin’s extensive experience and her commitment to decentralised governance align perfectly with IFTAS’s values of transparency, fairness, and safety. We are honoured to welcome her to the Advisory Board and are excited to collaborate on shaping the future of independent, inclusive online communities.

Please join us in extending a warm welcome to Erin!

We are extremely proud to announce our Content Classification Service is up and running, with our first classifier active. We are starting with detecting child sexual abuse media for our opt-in connected servers, and our plan is to introduce additional classifiers over time, including non-consensual intimate imagery, terroristic and violent extremist content, malicious URLs, spam, and more.

For the time being we are operating in a closed test with a very small number of servers, and we have a slate of additional server admins ready to participate in our beta. You can learn more – and sign up to participate – on the CCS Web page.

In other news, we are kicking off an exciting collaborative with the Bonfire Networks developer team.

Bonfire is a governance-first community platform using ActivityPub, and the developer team are interested in reviewing proposals from the moderator community for rapid iteration of evidence-based, prosocial tooling and workflow in a co-design effort with the moderator community.

The Bonfire team have already rapidly adopted several proposals including:

  • greyscaling and blurring media in reported content – this reduces trauma for moderators reviewing harmful content
  • muting audio in media files – no sudden noises, loud volume or traumatic audio for the moderation workflow
  • removing clickable links from reported content and suggesting URL investigation tools – this reduces the chance of moderators clicking through to phishing, malware, and other harmful web sites

Our IFTAS Connect community is working to provide additional feedback, and anyone is free to suggest additional feedback on the Bonfire GitHub.

This is a fantastic opportunity for the Fediverse’s trust and safety community to interactively guide the development of modular tooling that we hope will not only benefit Bonfire communities but can benefit the ecosystem at large, through modular adoption of the tooling, Fediverse Enhancement Proposals, or other platforms incorporating the same evidence-based prosocial approaches to empowering community managers and moderators.

We urge all IFTAS Connect moderator members to join us in the Moderator Tooling Workgroup and tell us all the tools, features and functions you want to see added to keep you and your community safe!

Lastly, a huge thank you to everyone who has responded to our community support drive, we’ve raised over $2,000 this year in direct community support and our IFTAS First 50 page is filling up! As we head into giving season, a quick reminder IFTAS is a 501c3, all donations are tax-deductible for US supporters, and we accept a wide range of support. If you can, donate today to keep supporting our mission!

https://about.iftas.org/2024/10/03/iftas-update-content-classification-moderation-tooling/

Replied to jaz :twt: :wales_flag:

@jaz I'm an artist, and I was tired of having to play the role of "content creator" on social media, because if your content isn't "trending", you are invisible, even to your own friends and fans. So when twitter went down, I found this oasis.
I have less followers here, but it feels like the forums and blogs of the old internet days. Feels good not to be a number for an algorithm.
#telleveryone #bettersocialmedia

Replied to jaz :twt: :wales_flag:

@jaz

Everyone (well nearly everyone!) on the #Fediverse behaves like civilised, intelligent adults. We all, at least try, to give others the right to speak and be heard without being attacked...just as one would do in a face to face discourse.

Content Warnings are used liberally as is Alt-text on images, videos, and even GIFs, and hastags (#) use pascal case (freecodecamp.org/news/snake-ca) all of which makes the #Fediverse a more inclusive space for everyone.

#BetterSocialMedia ❤️
#TellEveryone 📢

freeCodeCamp.org · Snake Case VS Camel Case VS Pascal Case VS Kebab Case – What's the Difference Between Casings?As a software engineer, you may be familiar with the following quote by Leon Bambrick: “There are 2 hard problems in computer science: cache invalidation, naming things, and off-by-1 errors.” Indeed, naming things when programming can be challengin...

👋 If you can see this toot you are on the #Fediverse enjoying #BetterSocialMedia

How flippin' awesome is that!?

In one or two sentences, tell me one thing that stands out for you personally, one of the reasons you enjoy being here.

And if you're ok with me using your answer in promotional material to get more people here, add the tag #TellEveryone 📢