Exploring the FOSS alternative to Twitter

Free and Social

© Lead Image © lightwise, 123RF.com

© Lead Image © lightwise, 123RF.com

Article from Issue 193/2016
Author(s):

GNU social is a free and open source microblogging platform similar to Twitter. You can join one of the public federated servers or set up your own in minutes.

In July of this year, Milo Yiannopoulos was banned from Twitter permanently as the website cracked down on several alleged incidents of racial abuse against Ghostbusters actor Leslie Jones [1]. The decision has sparked a wider discussion about freedom of expression online, and Twitter hasn't helped the situation by applying its own policies inconsistently at times. For example, Los Angeles Times journalist Fredrik deBoer pointed out that members of the Somali Al-Shabab militia have seemingly been permitted to discuss acts of violence openly despite being flagged by users [2].

The debate of freedom of expression versus toleration of hate speech will not be solved here. However, it's apparent that as long as people use public social networks like Twitter, they are not in control of their data. A social network giant can censor your messages or even sell your public tweets to data miners, as Twitter is reported to have done by The Guardian [3].

Enter the GNU

GNU social is quite simply a decentralized microblogging platform (Figure 1). It can be installed on a private server and can boast that it is both sponsored by and used by the Free Software Foundation [4].

Figure 1: The author's own GNU social account provided by quitter.no.

Crucially, GNU social allows for open and distributed communications between microblogging communities. Services are federated, so although a business or individual remains in control of their data, any user of any instance can follow, be followed by, and communicate with users of any other instance [5]. To follow a remote user, simply combine their username with the name of their chosen GNU node (e.g., janedoe@quitter.is).

The decentralized nature of GNU social naturally works both ways. If an overzealous admin censors users' online activity or is forced to do so via oppressive laws, users can simply create a new account on another GNU social node.

Given that the software can be deployed in minutes, it exists on hundreds of machines. A link to a full list of independent GNU social instances is available via the GNU main page [6]. For those who do not have their own server, there are several public deployments including quitter.se, quitter.no, quitter.is, quitter.es, and gnusocial.no. The Free Software Foundation itself runs a GNU social node at https://status.fsf.org/.

Quitter.es (Quitter España), for example, was created last year in a bid to cope with a huge migration of Spanish Twitter users to GNU social. On January 14, user @Barbijaputa – who was known for being openly critical of the Spanish government – was suspended from Twitter. The following day she created a profile on quitter.se and a number of her 167,000 followers chose to migrate with her [7].

StatusNet and GNU

GNU social has something of a convoluted history. It was started in 2010 as a spin off of the GNU FM project, which was designed to power music communities such as Libre.fm. In 2013, Evan Prodromou, who had recently discontinued work on his StatusNet project, kindly provided a copy of his work to be merged into the Free Software Foundation's own project [8].

Prodromou abandoned his work on StatusNet to concentrate on a federated social networking protocol known as pump.io, which is used in web applications like GNU MediaGoblin [9]. Today, GNU social has been installed on both public and private servers, although the decentralized nature of the project makes it difficult to calculate exact numbers of individual users.

Getting Started with GNU Social

The first step to use GNU social is to choose a server. You can host a server yourself or use one of the more popular public implementations like Quitter or LoadAverage. Quitter's interface is most similar to Twitter, so it provides the easiest transition. Moreover quitter.no and quitter.is are based in Norway and Iceland, respectively, which are not regulated by the European Data Protection Directive, which allows sharing of private data within EU states under certain circumstances [10]. Additionally, both sites are available in English and a range of European languages, as well as Arabic, Persian, Chinese, and Japanese.

Once you've registered your account on either a public server or your own GNU social Node, there are a range of clients to choose from. This is usually the stage where many users are unable to proceed, because typing quitter or loadaverage into their app store of choice will not yield anything meaningful. A fairly comprehensive list of all available clients is available online [11], but Android and iOS users will be pleased to hear that there are mobile versions of all the instances of Quitter.

Android users may wish to install the Mustard client (Figure 2), which has additional features like attachments, bookmarks, filters, and geolocation [12]. Users of iOS devices can download Mayo for Status.net free of charge to log in to their own instance of GNU social. In both cases, when asked to provide the server name, it's important to include the full link (e.g., https://quitter.se).

Figure 2: Those familiar with the Twitter mobile app will find Mustard easy to master.

Users of desktop machines can simply visit the GNU social instance in their browser. Alternatively, users of KDE can install Choqok (from the ancient Persian word for sparrow), which supports both Twitter and GNU social, making it easy to flit between the two [13]. Heybuddy is also an excellent Python client for GNU social, which will run in any desktop environment [14].

Once the necessary plugins have been installed, your GNU social instance may also be compatible with XMPP clients. The specific steps to get your XMPP client to talk to your GNU social users will vary from application to application but the Skilled Tests wiki has an excellent walk-through of the basic steps [15].

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