title: Mastodon's 2 Year Anniversary subtitle: A retrospective draft: false date: 2018-10-14 author: gargron resources:
Mastodon was first announced to the public through Hacker News, a link aggregator site for programmers, on October 6, 2016. Now we're celebrating the 2 year anniversary! 🎉
From 45 registered users on mastodon.social, the only Mastodon server at the time, the network grew to 1,627,557 registered users on 3,460 servers. That's not counting people on non-Mastodon servers that are compatible with Mastodon via ActivityPub!
There are a lot of small servers: The median user number per server is 8 people. The biggest server hosts 415,941 accounts. The 3 largest servers combined host 52% of the network's users, the 25 largest servers host 77% of all users *. This is natural as the largest servers are more known and therefore attract a lot of new people. However, for many people who stick around, they act as gateways, wherein once they learn more about Mastodon, they switch to a different, usually smaller server.
The oldest servers that are still around today are mastodon.social, awoo.space, social.tchncs.de and icosahedron.website.
Most exciting new server growth events:
To this day, mastodon.social, mstdn.jp, switter.at, pawoo.net and friends.nico are the largest servers.
From 332 commits by a single developer, the GitHub repository grew to over 6,140 commits by 513 people. Since the start of development in March 2016, 102 versions of Mastodon have been released, beginning with v0.1.0 up to the latest v2.5.2.
4,343 pull requests were merged, and 2,851 issues were closed.
This is what Mastodon looked like in October 2016:
Here is a time table of Mastodon's most notable features, that is, features that Mastodon is most known for today:
October 2016
November 2016
December 2016
January 2017
February 2017
March 2017
April 2017
June 2017
August 2017
September 2017
October 2017
December 2017
January 2018
March 2018
May 2018
September 2018
In the two year span, Mastodon was covered by:
I was interviewed on three different podcasts:
One piece of coverage stands out particularly as the source of a running joke on Mastodon. Lance Ulanoff from Mashable opened his April 2017 article "Six Reasons Mastodon Won't Survive" with the words "William Shatner couldn't find me on Mastodon. This was a problem." Since then, Mastodon was known as the Shatner-free space, where you are safe to hide from his gaze.
Of course, that article was wrong on many accounts, and severely underestimated Mastodon's survivability. There were many opinion pieces titled things like "Mastodon is dead in the water" predicting its timely demise. In the end, Mastodon out-survived App.net and Google+, a multi-million dollar project.
{{< mastodon "https://mastodon.social/@jk/99032083793694002" >}}
Since beginning as a single repository on GitHub, Mastodon has got:
I'm very happy with Mastodon's accomplishments. Overseeing such a large project has its ups and downs, as it's impossible to keep everyone happy all the time when people have conflicting desires. Regardless, I consider these to be the two best years of my life, as work on Mastodon is incredibly fulfilling and interacting with all the interesting people on the platform is very fun.
Would I have done something differently if I was starting from scratch now? Mostly, no. I still receive comments about the name "Mastodon" not being suitable, or "toot" being too silly. I wouldn't change it. I think there is nothing wrong with being less serious, and if it alienates more corporate-minded users, that's fine. I don't wake up every day wishing to interact with my favourite brand.
As for the future, development continues: The v2.6.0 version of Mastodon is currently in the works, containing many quality of life improvements, bug fixes, improved administrative tools and a decentralized version of identity verification.
Mastodon has proved itself sustainable and has accomplished a lot in taking a foothold in mainstream consciousness. With more and more people become disillusioned with the tech giants, Mastodon will become ever more appealing. Let's get to ten million users next.