Yeah, there are web browser plugins and DNS blockers and stuff. I use those too! But this works even in app-based clients and when I’m away from my home network. You know—that rumored “outside” place?
It's good to see people reconsidering #Substack for hosting newsletters.
If you're looking to start a newsletter, or migrate to a different platform, it can be hard to make sense of the different pricing schemes that each platform uses.
I made a tool to make it easier to compare how much it might cost to host your newsletter on each platform:
Anybody who posts that they're leaving #Substack for a new platform, I will boost whether I have subscribed/followed them or not. Presumably they have good values if they want to leave Substack, and I want to do my part to help them reach their whole audience.
A few years ago I started a newsletter on Substack. My goal wasn't to monetize it, but it has such an easy interface that made it easy to use and the potential for a great community. After the Nazi BS it was no longer an acceptable home for my newsletter. I investigated a couple alternatives, and finally settled on Beehiiv. It also has an easy to use interface, an attractive landing page, and a TOS that doesn't allow Nazis or other hate groups. #Art#Substack#Beehiivhttps://symmetricaluniverse.beehiiv.com/
Want to move your newsletter to a self-hosted Ghost installation? @wes has written this comprehensive step-by-step guide, covering how much it will cost, what you'll need, how to import your posts and subscribers and more.
"[SubStack] began encouraging individual writers to recommend one another, funneling tens of thousands of subscribers to like-minded people. It started to send out an algorithmically ranked digest of potentially interesting posts to anyone with a Substack account, showcasing new voices from across the network. And in April of this year, the company launched Notes, a text-based social network resembling Twitter that surfaces posts in a ranked feed."
This is the strongest part of Platformer's criticism of #SubStack. One can argue that hosting writing most people find unsavoury, and even making money from doing so, is desirable. In democracies that value protecting minorities from the tyranny of the majority. But recent history has taught us that showing people unsavoury writing they're not even looking for is a recipe for trouble.
I don't want people coming to a platform to read my work, then being told 'you might also like Nazis!'
As Casey openly admitted in his first piece on the subject it was never really about "Nazis". Demanding #SubStack boot "Nazi" publications was always about establishing a precedent for the banning of any other speech accused of being "harm" by Casey and his fellow travellers.
I just sent my very first newsletter for #TheRealists via #Ghost (love love love this platform) after ditching #substack.
The topic? A bit of personal history about being a geriatric millennial, living my whole life in between two worlds... and raising a small child away from screens.
Diversity! Das macht die globale Tech-Community aus und das bedeutet auch, dass die diejenigen, die diese heterogenen Strukturen, unsere taeglich gelebte Vielfalt zerstoeren wollen, Tech und Fortschritt ausbremsen!
Wenn du verrueckt nach Tech bist, dann kannst du weder rechts, noch rechtsextrem, rechtspopulistisch, Faschist oder Nazi sein.
Und aus diesem Grund verlasse ich die Plattform, die Nazi-Content monetarisiert!
Rusty re: Today in Tabs: "Personally since moving off Substack I’ve had modest growth in paid subscribers and modest decline in free subscribers."
Today in Tabs is one of the best things to hit my inbox and I'm so glad it's off #Substack so I can subscribe, ethically. Maybe you'd like to give it a try if you aren't yet a subscriber. https://www.todayintabs.com/
Hey friends, Substack is deeply problematic. Please, for your own credibility, move to other platforms for your newsletter as soon as you can. There are good tutorials floating around on Mastodon to help you.
Well, it took a bit more effort than I expected, but I'm completely off Substack as of today.
I dunno if Better Bits, the supporting site for my on-again, off-again book will make a reappearance elsewhere. But Net API Notes, the API industry newsletter I've written since 2015, can now be found at http://netapinotes.com.
In einer Welt, in der offene Protokolle das Ende der Gatekeeper eingelaeutet haben, gibt es keine Ausreden mehr wenn es darum geht sich gegen wirre Content-Policies der Plattformen zu positionieren. #MeTacheles zieht bei #Substack die Reissleine!
Anstand ist nicht verhandelbar & genau deshalb verlasse ich die Plattform, die Nazi-Content monetarisiert.
Wuerde mich mehr denn je freuen, wenn ihr diese Ausgabe teilt, repostet und boostet.