Search for a command to run...

Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
PJ Vogt from Search Engine partners with Hard Fork co-hosts Casey Newton and Kevin Roos to conduct an ambitious year-long experiment in building their own social media platform called "The Forkiverse" on the decentralized network known as the Fediverse. (02:36) The episode explores whether the Fediverse - a collection of interconnected, open social media platforms - could offer an alternative to the toxic dynamics of mainstream social media. (03:43) Through their journey of creating and launching their own Mastodon server, the hosts investigate the potential and pitfalls of decentralized social networking while learning firsthand about the technical and social challenges of building healthier online communities.
Host of the acclaimed podcast "Search Engine," PJ Vogt is a veteran podcaster and journalist known for his investigative approach to technology and internet culture. He previously co-hosted "Reply All" and has established himself as one of the leading voices in technology journalism, combining rigorous reporting with accessible storytelling about complex digital phenomena.
Co-host of the Hard Fork podcast and writer behind the Platformer newsletter, Casey Newton is a prominent technology journalist who covers social media platforms and their impact on society. He has over 200,000 followers across platforms and has made notable moves between platforms based on policy disagreements, including leaving both Twitter/X and Substack due to content moderation concerns.
Technology reporter for The New York Times and co-host of Hard Fork, Kevin Roos is known for his hands-on approach to covering emerging technologies. He regularly experiments with new tech in his reporting, including spending a month communicating only with AI chatbots to test their capabilities as replacements for human interaction.
Unlike traditional social media where leaving a platform means losing your entire network, the Fediverse allows users to move between servers while maintaining their connections and followers. (35:39) Casey Newton illustrated this perfectly by comparing his experience leaving Twitter (where he lost 200,000 followers and faced financial consequences) with leaving Substack (where he successfully migrated 200,000 email subscribers to a new platform). This portability represents a fundamental shift in how we think about online identity and community ownership, giving users genuine leverage against platform policies they disagree with.
The Forkiverse demonstrated how federated platforms can immediately access content from other open networks without requiring users to create multiple accounts. (29:56) Kevin could follow accounts on Mastodon, Lemmy (Reddit-like), PixelFed (Instagram-like), and even some Threads accounts, all from their single Forkiverse server. This interoperability breaks down the traditional silos that keep users trapped within individual corporate ecosystems, potentially creating a more connected and less monopolized internet experience.
The technical barriers to creating social media platforms have dramatically lowered, as demonstrated when Kevin used OpenAI's operator to autonomously set up their Mastodon server for just $89 per month. (19:54) The AI successfully purchased a domain, configured hosting, and established most of the technical infrastructure in about 20 minutes. This accessibility means that communities, organizations, or even individuals can create their own social spaces without massive technical expertise or capital investment.
The Forkiverse operates without the engagement-maximizing algorithms that drive mainstream platforms, creating what the hosts described as "pristine" and "not yet stressful" experience. (24:16) PJ noted feeling "uncomplicated joy" about this version reminiscent of the earlier internet, while Casey observed it felt like "pure snow." This suggests that algorithm-free environments might naturally discourage the toxic engagement patterns we've come to associate with social media, though it remains to be seen whether such platforms can maintain user interest without artificial stimulation.
The hosts identified a critical challenge: much of the existing Fediverse community appears focused on recreating "the magic of old Twitter" rather than building something genuinely new. (33:29) Casey argued that "whatever comes next has to feel different than what came before" and that the backward-looking nature of many Fediverse communities might limit adoption. This insight suggests that successful alternatives to mainstream social media will need to offer compelling new experiences, not just cleaner versions of familiar formats.