Eugen Rochko
Eugen Rochko | |
---|---|
Born | 1993 (age 30–31) |
Other names | Gargron |
Alma mater | Friedrich Schiller University |
Occupation(s) | Software developer and computer scientist |
Known for | Founder of Mastodon |
Eugen Rochko (born 1993) is a German software developer, best known as the original creator of the distributed open-sourced microblogging service Mastodon, a decentralized federated social network platform with "stringent anti-abuse and anti-discrimination policies".[1]
Early life and education
Rochko was born in a Jewish family of Russian origin,[2] and moved to Germany at the age of eleven.[3] He attended the grammar school in Jena and studied computer science at Friedrich-Schiller University, a public university in Jena.[4] In his youth he was active on networks such as MySpace, schülerVZ , Facebook, Twitter, and ICQ.[5][6]
Career
In early 2016, while still studying in Jena, Rochko started working on the Mastodon software.[7] In June 2017 Rochko told an interviewer that he loved free software and this, along with his growing disappointment with Twitter, had motivated him to create Mastodon.[2] and he launched Mastodon in Beta Version that year.[8] He published the software in October 2016 upon the completion of his degree.[7] By April 2017, there were 1,000 independently run "instances" on Mastodon's federated social network platform with "hundreds of thousands of users" using personal and public servers, according to a June 2017 Free Software Foundation (FSF) interview.[2] Because of its source code, not just the content is open, anyone can use it to create their own server with customized and enforced rules and regulations. These individual servers are part of the distributed or federated social network.[9]
In a 6 November 2022 Time interview, Rochko said he started it as a "hobbyist project".[10] According to Forbes, Rochko based the name on the Atlanta, Georgia-based heavy metal rock band Mastodon.[11][10] According to his 2018 Esquire interview, he was motivated to create Mastodon to provide a space that was not commercial and was more curated than Twitter.[8] By August 2018, Mastodon had grown to a membership of approximately 1.5 million with a surge in membership in the wake of Twitter's refusal to ban Infowars' Alex Jones, according to Esquire.[8] In 2022, he told an interviewer he was motivated by rumours that a billionaire could buy Twitter, and his dissatisfaction with some of the social media platform's functions. Rochko said that a platform like Twitter plays an important role in democracy and should not be controlled by a US corporation.[12]
Rochko developed Mastodon with crowdfunding through Patreon and OpenCollective, and an open-source development grant from Samsung.[1] By July 2017, there were 727 individuals supporting Mastodon on Patreon.[2] He published it in early October 2016 after completing his computer science studies at the University of Jena.[7] He later implemented the ActivityPub protocol for Mastodon.[5] As of July 2017, Rochko self-described as Mastodon's main developer and project manager working alongside @maloki@mastodon.social, Mastodon's project manager.[2] The rest of the work was undertaken by volunteers.[2] By May 2017, there were already 323 different volunteer GitHub contributors; only a dozen were regular contributors.[2] Rochko and one other person merged pull requests made by volunteers into Mastodon's master branch.[2]
A Daily Dot article by reporter Ana Valens, who focuses on issues such as queer communities and adult content, said that by November 2016, following the election of Donald Trump, Mastodon had attracted many people in the queer community.[4] These early adopters appreciated the potential of the "decentralized fediverse" as a form of protection for marginalized users.[4] They volunteered in many roles including project management and open source software development.[4] Valens said that Rochko's—and by extension Mastodon's—"hyperfixation on avoiding politics" where a content warning (CW) was added to posts about politics, harmed people of colour and other marginalized groups, whose identities, Valens said, were "inherently political". Valens said that by 2019, there were two competing camps at Mastodon—the marginalized queers and "white, well-off, and male tech workers" whose views aligned with Rochko. She described Rochko as a Benevolent Dictator For Life (BDFL)—a term given to some open source software developers who retain a final say in decisions.[4] In his interview for the Daily Dot article, Rochko said that he did not see BDFL as a "harsh description" of Mastodon but as a programming term describing a form of governance that Rochko felt was more efficient than "rule by committee".[4]
In a November 2019 interview with mint in the week following the influx of 26,000 new members from India who had exited Twitter for "opaque moderation policies, censoring government critics and failing to control hate speech", Rochko said that Mastodon had extended its policy of not condoning casteism" as well as "racism, sexism, homophobia or transphobia"[1] Rochko said that in contrast to Twitter, Mastodon had a "higher ratio of moderator-to-users" who monitor posts.[1]
Five years after it creation, in August 2021 Rochko announced that he had incorporated Mastodon as a non-profit Gesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung (GmbH)—the most common German form of non-profit LLC—as founder and sole shareholder.[13] All of Mastodon's income sources and activities were transferred to this new legal entity with Rochko as CEO and employee with a fixed wage.[14][9]
In previous open-source projects, Rochko had used the widely used free software license, General Public License (GPL), originally written by Free Software Foundation's founder, Richard Stallman. For Mastodon, he chose the AGPL license for network software that provides network clients with access to the software's source. In 2019, the far-right Gab began to use Mastodon's open source software under this license which they breached.[15] Rochko said that the Mastodon server covenant mandating "active moderation against racism, sexism, homophobia, and transphobia" isolates any such use of the open source software.[16] He said Gab's developers had severed ties with the Mastodon development process.[17] According to Rochko, Gab developers immediately complied with Mastodon's October 21, 2021 Cease & Desist letter in regards to Gab's AGPLv3 license breach. Gab updated their archive of their source code which had been password-protected.[15] In spite of Mastodon's opposition, Truth Social also used Mastodon's code.[9]
When Elon Musk took over Twitter, users flocked to Mastodon, with 230,000 new members in the first week of November.[18] A Forbes article quoted Rochko saying he was optimistic that people who left Twitter for Mastodon would "enjoy a different kind of social media experience".[11]
Media coverage
Articles and interviews with Rochko about his role in Mastodon have been published in Der Tagesspiegel,[6][12] Esquire,[8] The Daily Dot, [4] Time,[10] and others. In a 2018 podcast with Jerod Santo and Adam Stacoviak from Twitter and GitHub, Rochko described in depth the origins of Mastodon.[3] In his 2022 Tagesspiegel interview, Rockko said that had "no power over what anyone posts on Mastodon".[12] He also discussed freedom of expression, legal issues that involve police, and criticism of Israel's government.[12]
Citations
- ^ a b c d Khandekar 2019.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Hsieh 2017.
- ^ a b Santo & Stacoviak 2018.
- ^ a b c d e f g Valens 2019.
- ^ a b Tilley 2018.
- ^ a b Tagesspiegel 2017.
- ^ a b c Lekach 2017.
- ^ a b c d O'Neil 2018.
- ^ a b c Huang 2022.
- ^ a b c Perrigo 2022.
- ^ a b Shrivastava 2022.
- ^ a b c d Reçber 2022.
- ^ Rochko 2021.
- ^ Rochko 2019.
- ^ a b Mastodon 2019.
- ^ Robertson 2019.
- ^ Wilson 2021.
- ^ Kleiman 2022.
References
- Hsieh, John (10 July 2017). "Mastodon interview". Free Software Foundation. Retrieved 6 November 2022.
- Huang, Kalley (7 November 2022). "What Is Mastodon and Why Are People Leaving Twitter for It?". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 7 November 2022.
- Khandekar, Omkar (13 November 2019). "Mastodon looking for moderators speaking Tamil, Bengali: Founder". mint. Retrieved 1 November 2022.
- Kleiman, Zoe (6 November 2022). "Twitter users jump to Mastodon - but what is it?". BBC News. Retrieved 7 November 2022.
- Lekach, Sasha (6 April 2018). "The coder who built Mastodon is 24, fiercely independent, and doesn't care about money". Mashable. Retrieved 6 November 2019.
- "Gab switches to Mastodon's code". Official Mastodon Blog. July 2019. Retrieved 7 November 2022.
- O'Neil, Luke (22 August 2018). "Tired of Nazis in Your Twitter Mentions? Try Mastodon". Esquire. Retrieved 1 November 2022.
- Perrigo, Billy (6 November 2022). "Thousands Have Joined Mastodon Since Twitter Changed Hands. Its Founder Has a Vision for Democratizing Social Media". Time. Retrieved 6 November 2022.
- Reçber, Sinan (3 May 2022). "Mastodon, Wir haben keine Macht darüber, was jemand auf Mastodon veröffentlicht". Der Tagesspiegel (in German). Retrieved 1 November 2022.
- Robertson, Adi (12 July 2019). "How the biggest decentralized social network is dealing with its Nazi problem". The Verge. Retrieved 1 November 2022.
- Rochko, Eugen (August 2021). "Mastodon now a non-profit organisation". Official Mastodon Blog. Retrieved 1 November 2022.
- "Join the federation?! Mastodon awaits..." (Podcast). Changelog. 19 September 2018. Retrieved 6 November 2022.
{{cite podcast}}
: Unknown parameter|people=
ignored (help) - Shrivastava, Rashi (4 November 2022). "Mastodon Isn't A Replacement For Twitter–But It Has Rewards Of Its Own". Forbes. Retrieved 7 November 2022.
- Von Olivier (14 April 2017). "Twitter bekommt Konkurrenz aus Deutschland". Der Tagesspiegel (in German). Retrieved 6 November 2022.</ref>
- Tilley, Sean (9 July 2018). "One Mammoth of a Job: An Interview with Eugen Rochko of Mastodon". Medium. Retrieved 6 November 2022.
- Valens, Ana (20 May 2021) [18 January 2019]. "Mastodon is crumbling—and many blame its creator". The Daily Dot. Retrieved 1 November 2022.
- Wilson, Jason (11 March 2021). "Gab: hack gives unprecedented look into platform used by far right". the Guardian. Retrieved 1 November 2022.