this post was submitted on 08 Jan 2024
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[–] [email protected] 3 points 10 months ago (10 children)

So the fediverse has missed an opportunity here.

Get subscriptions into the system, but decentralised (ie, not bound to a single platform / corporation) and you've pretty much got substack on the fediverse automatically with authors having all the control substack gives them and more.

It's a real no-brainer except that the fediverse's aversion to money and any sort of "transactional" internet means such things are an afterthought here it seems, unfortunately.

It saddens me a little, because on top of that, there seems to be relatively little impetus to lean into bringing blogging back on the fediverse (compared to trying to merely clone twitter), when it seems like the perfect fit for the fediverse and its decentralisation (unlike cloning twitter, which won't really happen on the fediverse TBH). And just when a company could have been taught a lesson the fediverse seems to me to have dropped the ball.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 10 months ago (1 children)

there seems to be relatively little impetus to lean into bringing blogging back on the fediverse

There's literally a wordpress plugin.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 10 months ago

I mean that looks a bit more like wordpress expanding their platform/ecosystem to get more engagement from mastodon (AFAIU, they've implemented user based federation only) ... which is all good.

But it's not the same thing as fulfuling the fediverse promise of a single ecosystem in which you have many options/possibilities to create the social graphs and interactions you want. In this case, something like a platform/plugin etc where any fediverse account (lemmy, mastodon, etc) allows you to subscribe/follow a blogger through a subscription, which is paid if desired, all without really having to leave the fediverse and be bound to the whims of any particular platform/company.

I don't know much about wordpress so maybe all of that is there already?

But, if there hasn't been some migration from substack to wordpress, then I have to presume it's because that ecosystem doesn't provide the same thing that substack does, and which I suspect the fediverse with its more social-media inclined platforms could provide if it had native and well-integrated blogging platforms or features with the ability to have limited subscription-driven access.

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