Mastodon is making its decentralized social network easier to use with its latest revamp
Built on the ActivityPub protocol, Mastodon became better known after Elon Musk acquired Twitter, now called X, which led some to seek alternatives. The platform’s appeal is its decentralized nature, meaning a single company doesn’t have control of the algorithm, and users can move their accounts if they don’t like how a particular server operates or moderates its community. However, this system is also more complicated compared with signing up for a traditional social network like X. On Mastodon, users have to pick a server to join and have different timelines (local and federated), which can be confusing to newcomers. The process for following others on the service can be cumbersome, too.
In February, it simplified the onboarding process and added other features users expect, like Quote Posts or “starter packs” called Collections. Now it’s tackling user profiles.
The revamped version makes several changes, many of which are visual in nature.
What’s changing Instead of offering two views of a person’s posts (“posts” or “posts and replies”), similar to X, profiles feature just one “Activity” tab with a dropdown menu. This lets users configure other combinations of posts, by toggling on or off replies and boosts — the latter being Mastodon’s version of the repost. Hashtags also now appear at the top of this Activity tab, allowing users to filter the posts on that account by the tag they click on. Mastodon also ditched the pinned posts carousel, which many users didn’t like.
Another change is designed to explain Mastodon handles to newcomers.
A new informational pop-up explains this. Users have more control over how their profile appears, too, with options to hide the “Media” or “Featured” tabs, if desired, or hide replies from their “Media” tab if they want to showcase their work. Custom fields on the profile, where users add things like links, pronouns, and other information, are displayed side by side, which means there’s more vertical space available on the screen. These fields can now be modified on iOS and Android, too, not just the web. Other tweaks to the design make profiles seem less cluttered — like the removal of a “following you” badge and moving the optional “personal note” users add to their profiles to an overflow menu. Profile edits can now all be done from one place in the account settings, allowing users to manage tasks like their featured hashtags (which Mastodon helpfully now suggests), links, and other profile information.
Users can crop and add alt text to their profile images and cover photos.
The changes will initially be available to the mastodon.
social server and other servers that opt to run the nightly build.
More servers will get the update when the Mastodon 4.
6 software update arrives in a few weeks
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