My Perfect Social Media Platform

  • Multimedia support: The platform would support various media types, including text, pictures, GIFs, videos, audio files, and more. It would have a view similar to Lemmy and a grid-view for visual content, like an image board.

  • Tagging System[1][2]: The platform would implement a tagging system so users can categorize posts with relevant keywords. This helps others find content on specific topics and organizes content for better discoverability.

  • Custom feeds[3]: Allow users to create custom feeds that combine posts from multiple users, instances, include/exclude keywords, hashtags. This is similar to Reddit’s multireddit, Kbin magazines and Firefish antennas. Firefish antennas allow users to specify keywords to include/exclude in categorized feeds.

  • Upvoting and downvoting system: Users can upvote and downvote posts and comments to rank content. This usually surfaces entertaining content.

  • Multi-criteria rating[4]: Star ratings for various criteria to rank content based on a comprehensive evaluation. Multi-criteria ratings allow ranking content based on other factors, like quality instead of entertainment value. Could be a dropdown menu on every post/comment.

  • User reputation or karma[5]: A user reputation or karma system based on contributions and interactions. This could be used to incentivize curation over posting, and quality content over entertaining content.

  • Achievements: Implement a gamified achievement system based on usage.

  • Reactions: In addition to upvotes/downvotes, allow a wider range of reactions to posts and comments. For example, Facebook reactions like Like, Love, Haha, Sad, Angry.

  • Threaded comments: Posts would have a threaded tree-like comment system for easy discussion.

  • Private messaging: Users would be able to send private messages to each other.

  • Notifications: Users could receive real-time notifications for new posts, comments, messages, etc. This increases user engagement.

  • Custom themes: Multiple color themes, including a default low-contrast dark mode.

  • Localization: Support multiple languages to expand reach.

  • User profiles: Detailed user profiles allow users to showcase their contributions, interests, and customize their presence on the platform. Users would have granular control over their profile privacy, being able to share with nobody, only followed users, or make fully public. Profile sections like bio, posts, collections, reputation, and other details could be toggled private or public individually.

  • Blocking: Users can block other users, tags and communities they don’t want to see.

  • Content filtering[6]: Users can hide/blur/unblur-on-mouse-over content based on tags, regex or content type, such as text, images, videos, or links, allowing them to focus on the content they prefer.

  • Federated: The platform would be federated using the ActivityPub protocol, allowing for interoperability with other platforms in the Fediverse.

  • Advanced search and tag filtering[7]: The platform would offer advanced search and tag filtering options to improve content discovery. The advanced search functionality would allow users to craft complex searches to find relevant content. Some key features:

    • Boolean operators: Support AND, OR, NOT operators to combine multiple search terms and keywords. For example, “cat AND dog” or “linux NOT windows”.
    • Exact match: Use quotation marks around phrases to search for exact matches. For example, “open source software” would only return results containing that exact phrase.
    • Field search: Allow searching within specific fields like title, tags, author, content, etc. Useful for narrowing results.
    • Tag filtering: Allow including or excluding specific tags. For example, search for “programming” but exclude posts tagged #beginner.
    • Date range filtering: Filter results within a timeframe, like posts from the last week, month, year etc.
    • Sorting: Results can be sorted by relevance, upvotes, comments, date, etc.
    • Search within communities: Scope the search to one or more specific communities.
    • Search within collections: Scope search to user-created collections of posts.
    • Fuzzy search: Return results that match misspellings and partial text.
    • Synonym search: Search using synonyms automatically expands the query.
    • Stemming: Match word stems so “run”, “running”, “ran” match.
    • Stop words: Ignore common words like “the”, “and”, “or” that don’t help narrow search.
    • Search suggestions: Provide search term suggestions and autocomplete as the user types.
    • Saved searches: Allow saving complex searches for repeated use.
    • Search syntax highlighting: Visual cues to ensure valid syntax.
    • Search tutorials: Embedded tutorials explain how to effectively use advanced search. The goal is to provide users with maximum flexibility and control over search to efficiently find relevant content. Advanced options cater to both novice and power users.
  • Collections[8]

    • Users should be able to create collections of posts with private/public visibility, which can be edited either by the creator only or by anybody. There are a total of four types of collections.
    • A default private collection for saved posts should be available, ensuring that saved posts work just as they do now.
    • This feature would provide better organization over a single saved list.
    • For even more organization allow to add tags to the collections.
    • Allow posts to have an order in the collection. For a story for example, chapter 1, 2, etc.
    • Allow sorting posts within a collection by date, upvotes, comments, etc.
    • Let users follow collections created by others to see new posts added to it.
    • Integration with search - allow searching within specific collections.
    • Browse/search public collections by tags.
    • Recommend collections to users based on their interests and activity.
  • Downloading: Users can easily download media, collections, or tags.

  • User trust levels and community moderation[9]

    • The platform would implement user trust levels on a per community and per instance basis, to avoid admin/mod burnout and reliance on bots for moderation. Instance admins could choose to have moderators, only user trust levels, or both.

    • Instance admins can configure the number of trust levels, the number of users desired for each level or the reputation thresholds for reaching each trust level, the reputation scored for each activity, and the privileges granted at each level.

    • The number of users desired for each level or the reputation thresholds would be automatically calculated based on the other configurable parameters.

    • In communities with human moderators, instance admins can restrict their privileges to a subset of actions rather than full control.

    • Moderators could be chosen manually by admins or automatically based on recent activity and voting affinity with admins.

    • There could be an appeals process where users can contest moderator actions. A user with a higher trust level would review the appeal and penalize the incorrect party by reducing reputation, either the user for an invalid appeal or the moderator for improper moderation. There could be loss of privileges too, forever or until gaining a given reputation.

    • This flexibility allows instances to define granular trust and moderation models tailored to their needs.

    • 5 user trust levels by default like Discourse[10]. Also by default anybody whos used the platform for a few days should have the privilege of editing/hiding answers to their content (posts/comments). Who better to moderate your content than yourself, and thanks to user trust levels and moderation appeal, there’s no need to bother the admin if someone takes liberties with this privilege.

  • User curation[11]: Users above a reputation threshold could tag posts for better organization, like on image boards. This improves curation compared to Lemmy which relies on titles.

  • Customizable feed algorithms[12][13]

    • Users can browse and install various third-party algorithms and filters to customize their feeds, similar to browser extensions.

    • An in-platform algorithm marketplace allows users to discover algorithms by popularity, creator, purpose, compatibility, etc.

    • Users can view algorithm source code, ratings, reviews, and example output to evaluate options.

    • Empowers users to shape their own experiences rather than relying on centralized feed choices.

  • Machine learning algorithms: The platform would use machine learning algorithms to personalize feeds and suggest posts based on user recent activity.

  • User affinity: A user affinity system connects users with similar interests based on recent activity.

  • Affinity recommendations: Recommendations based on high affinity users’ activity.

  • One-size-fits-all image format: The platform would adopt a simple, one-size-fits-all image format for easy sharing without formatting issues.

  • Affinity search: Search results biased by user’s affinity network improves relevance.

  • Anonymous posting: Instances/communities could allow anonymous or pseudonymous posting. Users could choose to be anonymous or pseudonymous on the communities that allow it. The options could be show user name, pseudonym for instance, pseudonym for community, pseudonym for post, temporary ID for post, hide identity completely. Anonymity modes should prevent linking post history between communities. Theres a more detailed explanation here.

  • Ephemeral content[14]: Users, communities and instances could enable automatic pruning of old posts after a set amount of time.

  • Polls and surveys: Allow users to create polls and surveys to gauge opinions and feedback.

  • Block quote: Allow users to selectively quote parts of posts/comments when replying, which link to the original source, like in Discourse. Expand this feature to describe other interesting things that Discourse implements over CommonMark markdown.

  • Custom vote federation[15]

    • Allow users or instances to limit which votes are counted from other instances.
    • Completely opt out of vote federation.
    • Limit vote federation to chosen or high affinity instances.
    • Implement a manual or automatic weighting system to value some instances higher than others, like chosen or high affinity instances.
    • This preserves thematic uniqueness across the fediverse, as vote federation tends to homogenize instances.
    • This would enable each instance to preserve its thematic focus and uniqueness, providing a more tailored experience for users and instances.
  • Registration throttling based on monthly active users

    • Allow admins to set a cap on the maximum number of monthly active users.
    • Once the cap is reached, new user registrations are throttled or disabled until activity declines and space frees up.
    • This prevents communities from growing too quickly before adequate moderation is in place.
  • Q&A features

    • Best answer pinning: Allow OP or privileged users to pin the best answer to a questions.
    • Solved filtering: Allow filtering posts by solved/unsolved status.
    • Bounties: Allow users to offer reputation bounties for the best answers to their questions.
  • Post bumping[16]: Instances/communities can enable post bumping. It allow users to bump old posts back to the top of feeds. This helps keep evergreen content circulating. Instances could limit the number of times or how often posts can be bumped.

  • Related posts[17]: When creating or accessing a post, users are shown other similar posts that may be of interest. This helps connect related content. Relatedness could be either manually determined by the users or automatically determined by tags, title similarity, user affinities, etc.

Other ideas

  • Self-governing communities: Users can create communities with granular controls over who can view and post content. Communities can be completely open, closed and invite-only, or anything in between.

  • Anonymous and pseudonymous posting: Users have the option to post anonymously or under a pseudonym on a community-by-community basis. Their post history can also be private. This allows free expression without fear of repercussions.

  • Automatic post pruning: Posts can be automatically deleted after a set time period, per community preferences.

  • Flexible community structures: Communities can be structured like Reddit, 4chan, or private group chats.

  • Decentralized backend: Store content on decentralized networks like IPFS rather than centralized servers. This ensures persistence even if the originating instance of a community goes down.

  • Community forking: Communities can be forked by users with permission. The fork with the most users keeps the name. This decentralizes moderator power.

  • Customizable feeds: Users can install community-created filters, blocklists, algorithms to customize their feeds. Empowers user control.

  • Repost detection: Duplicate posts are consolidated. You won’t see the same content twice.

  • Trending detection: Trending content is detected via keywords and topics rather than hashtags.

  • Reverse image search: Built-in reverse image search to find related/duplicate visual content.

  • AI content summarization: AI summarizes text, images, video and audio for searchability and accessibility.

  • Aggressive recommendation feed: A separate feed with aggressive personalization, like YouTube Shorts.

  • Recommendation algorithm save points: Users can revert their recommendation algorithm to an earlier state if it gets off track.

  • Conversational AI: Asks questions about content to an AI assistant.

  • Multicommunity feeds: Custom feeds combining multiple communities, with associated search.

  • Ban users based on affinity and activity

    • Allow mods/admins to sort users by affinity and activity levels.
    • Users falling below configurable affinity and activity thresholds can be bulk banned or suspended with one click.
    • This allows removing inactive and bad faith users who don’t engage meaningfully.
    • Affinity is calculated based on voting patterns and agreement with mods/admins.
    • Activity is measured by number of posts, comments, votes, etc over a timeframe.
    • Banning by affinity/activity leaves engaged members intact.
    • Increases community coherence by aligning users around shared interests

Related

MusicBrainz, The Internet Archive, Stash-Box, Image Boards, Hydrus, MediaRepo, Stash, JellyFin, NextCloud, Beets, MusicBrainz Picard, TagSpaces, TagScanner, SpaceDrive, tocc, TMSU, SuperTag, wutag, Tabbles, allTags, Dolphin, ArchiveBox, Lemmy, Reddit, 4chan, Discourse

References


  1. GitHub — Request for Comments: Flexible Tag System ↩︎

  2. GitHub — Booru-Style Image View, Search and Tagging by Users ↩︎

  3. GitHub — Custom Feeds ↩︎

  4. GitHub — Expandable Menu with Star Ratings for Content Evaluation ↩︎

  5. GitHub — Grant users privileges based on user activity and voting affinity with the admin ↩︎

  6. GitHub — Filter for Hiding Unwanted Content ↩︎

  7. GitHub — Advanced Search and Tag Filtering ↩︎

  8. GitHub — Create Collections of Posts ↩︎

  9. GitHub — Grant users privileges based on user activity and voting affinity with the admin ↩︎

  10. Discourse Blog — Understanding Discourse Trust Levels ↩︎

  11. GitHub — Booru-Style Image View, Search and Tagging by Users ↩︎

  12. TheVerge — Bluesky rolls out feeds with custom algorithms ↩︎

  13. GitHub — Algorithm Marketplace ↩︎

  14. GitHub — Ephemeral Content: Automatic Removal of Old Content ↩︎

  15. GitHub — Enable Users to Customize Vote Federation ↩︎

  16. GitHub — Instance configuration for bumping posts ↩︎

  17. GitHub — Linking related posts ↩︎

  • DavidGarcia@feddit.nl
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    6
    ·
    1 year ago

    Very good, I have been thinking of something quite similar. A “what if I could have everything I want” social media platform. Here are some of the most important aspects, maybe they are useful to you:

    -Self-governing communities like Lemmy (not sure if instances make sense) with very fine-grained control over who can see and post what. You can either have a completely open community where everyone can see every post and everyone can post OR you can have an invite-only community where users can only see posts since they joined (and are allowed to see) and every post is anonymous OR anything in between.

    -I like Lemmy for the ability of instances to block each other, but not sure how that makes sense in the context of a decentralized backend.

    -Users should have the option to post anonymously or at least pseudonymously (on a community basis) in any community. They should have a choice if they want to share their post/comment history and with whom. Of course, communities have control over whether they allow that or not too. You might have one community that doesn’t allow anonymous posting at all, and another that only allows it if you have some form of reputation like karma. But I think optional pseudonymity on a community basis is a MUST. And if mods ban a pseudonymous account, the entire account is banned; they can’t just come back with more pseudonyms. I know people will get riled up over this, but I think it is important to let people speak their minds without fear of repercussions, also it’s important for privacy and to protect from doxxing.

    -Also, optional automatic post pruning, where posts are deleted after X amount of time.

    -Ideally, you should have the ability to have a community be like a Reddit sub, a 4chan-like board, or just you and your friends’ private server.

    -Communities can be forked by anyone with the right permissions. They will become the new mods, and the fork with the most users gets to keep the name. For that reason, communities aren’t necessarily hosted on instances like Lemmy, but on some decentralized backend like IPFS. This is so you don’t have to copy all the content and user data, but just the references to it, to make forking as low-cost as possible. This is done to rein in the power of mods, making them work for the users. Also, it would allow communities to more easily naturally split without losing old content.

    -I would have an “app market” for community-created feed algorithms, block lists, filtering algorithms, etc., where users can pick based on features, hosting cost, etc… AI filtering is well and good, but it’s still expensive, so you have to account for that. It would give users the ultimate power over their own user experience. I hate outsourcing social media algorithms to other people; it’s like outsourcing your own brain and letting others decide what you think.

    -Reposts should be lumped together in yout feed. Ideally, you wouldn’t see the same post twice. This also applies to media; the same photo with a different title shouldn’t be shown twice. But perhaps you have some threshold where if the context is different enough, you show it twice.

    -Like you said, AI post/comment filters. For example, I only want to be able to see left-wing comments or comments about cats or positive/negative comments. Comments could be clustered into categories like that, perhaps creatable by the users themselves. Also, I want the ability to see a broad mix of these categories. For example, for political subs, I want to know what each political orientation is thinking about this.

    -Comment filters for the most unique comments. It should show me the one guy in a million samey comments who thinks there is a wizard conspiracy behind all world events, if I want to see that.

    -Comment section summary, telling you what all the unique opinions in the comments section are. So if there are 10,000 comments about cats and one about a dog, I want to see 50% what the cat and 50% what the dog people think in the summary. Something like that.

    -Built-in text post/link summary.

    -A trending feature like Twitter, but more with smart keywords, not hashtags. So, for instance, 100 posts about the same soccer game with completely different content are shown in trending with the keyword “Frogfordshire Divided vs. Botingialera FC.” I believe that should be possible and financially viable with LLMs in the near future.

    -Reverse image search should be built in, and possibly even image-to-text that will then show you similar text posts to what is in the image.

    -Similarly, automatic AI captioning/summary of photo, video, audio content for better search and also for people with disabilities.

    -A separate feed like TikTok that aggressively tailors to your revealed preferences, alongside the regular feed. Like how YouTube has a normal feed and one for shorts.

    -You should have “recommendation algorithm save points.” I often click on one wrong YT video and my entire feed is off all of a sudden. So, I would like to be able to revert to the earlier point in the recommendation algorithm. Honestly, with modern ML embedding-based algorithms, that shouldn’t be that hard. You just allow users to save their personal vector/embedding. It’s literally just saving a history of vectors equivalent in size to tweets (Xweets? Xs? exes?).

    -A built-in conversational AI would be nice, that you can ask about any comments on a post, what is in the post, what is in the image (like “Identify this mushroom for me”).

    -Custom multicommunity feeds like multireddits, and also searches explicitly within this multicommunity. I often browse the Imaginary network for concept art, which just lumps together multiple subs.

    I would say the forking, the visibiliy/posting permissions, pseudonymity, custom feed/filtering algorthism are the most important features. Everything else is just nice to haves.

      • DavidGarcia@feddit.nl
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        2
        ·
        1 year ago

        Well both have threads in different communities (reddit subs vs. boards like /b/).

        4chan allows posting without an account, that is why it is popular for leakers, whistleblowers etc…

        4chan “post comments” are chronologic, reddit post comments are nesting and have various sort orders. I think Reddit is objectively better here in my opinon, so I would just ignore this difference and do it like Reddit/lemmy. But if you really want you can give communities power over this.

        4chan threads are automatically deleted after a short while, so they basically have pruning. This is a bit complex to explain, but I don’t think the exact mechanism is that important, as long as threads are deleted after a while. That is one important feature of 4chan vs Reddit where everything is saved.

        The most important point is that everyone on 4chan is anonymous by default. I don’t use 4chan, but if I rememeber correctly depending on the board: 1) you get a unique ID for the thread so others can identify you in the thread 2) on some boards you don’t get an ID, it’s just that every post has an ID, but you can’t tell what two posts are by the same person 3) You can also give yourself a name on some boards I think. Another level of “anonymity granulatity” that 4chan doesn’t have I think, could be you automatically get a unique ID cookie that expires after you don’t post for a while.

        Naturally there also is not post/comment history like there is on reddit.

        So what I like about 4chan is 1) posting without an account 2) posting anonymously 3) posting anonymously with a unique thread ID 4) posting pseudonymously without an account 5) thread/comment pruning aka auto delete after some time.

        But you could imagine all these various levels of anonymity on a spectrum from 4chan to Reddit. Phrased differently, from posting completely anonymously without an account and everything is deleted after some time like 4chan TO posting pseudonymously and posts stay forever and other users can see your post history like Reddit.

        To explain further what I mean by the spectrum between 4chan and Reddit:

        • In my optimal social network a community would be able to perfectly mimic 4chan.

        • Or a community could require you to have an account but otherwise mimic 4chan perfectly.

        • Or a community could force everyone to post under a community pseudonym, so if you have a history on other instances/communities others can’t see it, only your history on this community.

        • Or a community could allow you to choose if you want others to see your cross instance history or if you want to be community pseudonymous or if you want to be completely anonymous.

        • Or a community could require you to be completely transparent about your cross-instance history like Lemmy.

        • And any of those communities could auto delete posts/comments after a while, regardless of anonymity etc…

        But all of this with federation like Lemmy. So I can go to the community on a different instance (let’s say test.ml) that perfectly mimics a 4chan board (and requires an account) with my feddit.nl account and all my posts there will be anonymous. My post/comment history on this 4chan-like community won’t be visible in my account history and others on this 4chan-like community can’t tell it’s me.

        Lemmy kind of allows you to be pseudonymous on every instance by just making a differnt account for each instance. But that is tedious, I would want to be able to be pseudonymous on an instance/community level with my existing account without having to make a new account. Bonus of this being that admins/mods could ban pseudonymous accounts from certain instances, but not from others.

        Basically have various different anonymity/pseudonymity/pruning features that communities and users can mix and match depending on their needs.

        Why? Maybe you have cancer and you don’t want everyone else to know you are posting on a cancer community, but you still want others in that community to see your post history.

        And in general it’s just good OPSEC/privacy practice to have that kind of separation. It would be amazing to hinder Big Tech/Big Ad companies from mining and selling your data.

        I know some people don’t care at all about that, but I value my privacy and my optimal social network would protect is as much as I want.

        And anyone who doesn’t like those kinds of anonymity features, because of brigading or hate speech or whatever can just exclusively visit communities where those kinds of features are turned off.

        I personally wouldn’t want to frequent 4chan-like communities either, as they are basically the sewage pipe of the internet. I would want something between Reddit and 4chan. But I don’t see why not to let others have their fun in the sewers, so I would let communities and instances decide.

        And also would like to have a personal closed off community with my friends, like a Discord server or a group-chat, that I can access with my normal social media account without without worrying about data leaks. So there these features also come in handy.

        So yeah I think the optimal social network would let communities decide on these features in a very fine grained manner. And of course combine that with fine grained permissions, who can do/see what and why.

        Sorry for this post being so long and convoluted, but I hope you understand what I mean now. It’s just an unavoidably complex idea that I struggle to explain fully and succinctly. But every ounce of that complexity is nescessary if you ask me.

        • DavidGarcia@feddit.nl
          link
          fedilink
          arrow-up
          1
          ·
          1 year ago

          You could read my other very long reply to OP, but to answer your question in a nutshell:

          1. 4chan doesn’t require an account
          2. posters are anonymous (or temporarily pseudonymous)
          3. any post/comment on 4chan is deleted after a short while

          I wouldn’t recommend 4chan, I explain why and what features I like about it in the reply to OP.

          • Zippy@lemmy.world
            link
            fedilink
            arrow-up
            1
            ·
            1 year ago

            I read your posts. Interesting. I also find privacy to be an important desire on these platforms. That being said, being that anyone can open an instance and have access to the raw data, wouldn’t many of your features be logically impossible to implement under a distributed server philosophy.

            Or maybe better said, individual servers could certainly implement certain features but they would no be able to share the raw anonymous data without breaking their security. Or they could anonymize their data but what server would allow this and not block them rapidly. Thus I would need an account on every platform to access all content.

            • DavidGarcia@feddit.nl
              link
              fedilink
              arrow-up
              2
              ·
              1 year ago

              Well there is a lot that you can do to maximize security, privacy and anonymity in this setting.

              For expample, you can do optional client-side/end-to-end encryption, so the instance owner doesn’t even know what is going on on their server. E.g. like how Whatsapp, Signal etc do it. Delta Chat is even an example of an end-to-end encrypted federated messaging servive. Anyone can host a server, but server owners don’t know what anyone is talking about.

              For example, there might be an instance for my local county that most people from the county chose as a home instance. I can do end-to-end encrypted personal messaging on it like Signal/Whatsapp or end-to-end encrypted group chata or my end-to-end encrypted discord like community or a personal end-to-end encrypted Lemmy community for my friends and me. Only people with access can see what happens in these communities, server owners can not, they can only see the encrypted storage.

              Also you could do privacy protection cross instance by hiding the real account. Let’s say 1) you visit a new instance from your home instance, 2) you generate a new identity tied to your existing account, 3) you do some convoluted sheme to use zero-knowledge proofs to get your home instance to authenticate you as a trustworthy user, BUT without your home instance knowing your new identiy on the other instance, nor the new instance knowing your old identity. For all intents and purposes it’s like creating a completely new account for the new instance, except you get to keep your positive reputation from your home instance. Like a recommendation letter from your instance for an anonymous user.

              This will also become much more relevant once AI bots are becoming a problem in the fediverse. You need some way to prove you are a human, that doesn’t rely on centralization, or reduces your privacy or anonymity. Basically every instance also becomes an identity service, that can vouch for you that you are a trustworth real human.

              And again all these features would be optional for instances, communities and users. Some communities would use none of this and just work like regular old Lemmy. Even DMs could be visible for instance owners. As long as it’s clearly visible what your current level of privacy/anonymity is, I don’t see a problem with it. E.g. for corporate transparency you might have nothing end-to-end encrypted.

              I just want one big federated platform that can be used for pretty much every form of communication with appropriate levels of privacy and security for every use case. That’s my perfect fediverse, like the concept of “the end of history”, it’s “the end of social media”, i.e. we won’t have to change it for as long as humanity lives…

              But I’m gonna be honest, it’s possible that it would be a better solution to not have your identity tied to any single home instance, but have some sort of global identity management, that is like an umbrella layer over all instances. It functions in the same way that I described, with no instance knowing your real global identity. It just generates a new identity for every instance BUT somehow accumulates reputation accross instances. That reputation you can use to join new instances or to prove you are human, without actually ever revealing your “real” identity to them. Like, imagine you are a bouncer for a club, you can’t see anyone who wants enter the club, you just have an omnipotent guy that looks at them for you and that knows if they are trustworthy, and this guy just tells you who to let in and who not to. The bouncer is the instance and the omnipotent guy is the global identity service and the people that want to enter the club are users like you. The instance owner doesn’t know what users just entered, but they still know everyone is trustworthy.

              Something like that.

              Identity services/human verification like that are inevitable in my opinion, so I’d like them to be implemented in the best way possible, open-source, secure, completely decentralized, anonymous and private. No centralized government ID services, nor Big Tech ones, that is just ripe for abuse on a scale we’ve never seen before.

              This global identity service that I’m envisioning wouldn’t nescessarily be centralization, as there might not be some central point that does all the global identity management. Sort of how there are password managers that don’t store your passwords on any single server, but passwords are generated from the name of the domain and your master password and maybe a pw reset counter. This global identity management could function algorithmicly without any data storage OR work on “truely” decentralized (not federated) solutions like blockchains or torrents etc… Basically where the trustworthiness is guaranteed by the algorithms, not the server owners.

              And again all this obfuscation of identites might be optional. You might use the same identiy across different instances and everything you write in those instances might be public OR visible to the instance owner OR it might be completely encrypted, anonymous, private.

              Having all identities under one umbrella will give you a lot of convenience. For example you might want to delete your entire social media presence, so you just delete your global identity and all your sub identites will be deleted as well, along with all the content you posted under them (where that is allowed).

              It’s all about having the appropriate amount of privacy and anonymity for any use case, while keeping maximum convenience for users.

              Of course you could do this all today, using different platforms like Whatsapp, Discord, Matrix, Lemmy, etc. while juggling 10000 different accounts, with every platform working differently. No one can tell me that that is better solution… I just want it all federated standardized so you always know exactly what you’re getting yourself into.

              There might be 50 different variables that affect your privacy/anonymity on any instance/community and you get the same clearly structured overview of those varbiable on literally every instance/community on this “network”. No painfully extracting these variables from 1000 terms of service declations, no dealing with their shitty web design that is being forced on you to maximize clicks, no popups etc…

              Instead you can pick your own clients to browse, just like the Fediverse, while always having a clear understanding of your level of privacy and anonymity.

              Like I said, it should be the social media platform to end all social media to give the power back to the people, not some tech bro or the government. Just want people in virtual spaces to have the same agency they used to have in physical spaces. Privacy and anonymity by default used to be the norm in phyiscal spaces in a free society, but with the increasing virtualization that is no longer the case. I just want things to go back to normal.