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Medium launches a 'premium' Mastodon instance as a membership perk

Publishing platform Medium is opening up its debut Mastodon instance, me.dm, to its members, the company announced today.

Last month, Medium first teased its plans around the Fediverse -- the group of interconnected servers powering a range of open source, decentralized applications, including the Twitter alternative Mastodon and others. It said it wanted to make access to me.dm a perk included with Medium membership, offering a place for authors and readers to discuss the content published on its platform.

The company explained at the time that this would make for an interesting local feed -- a reference to how Mastodon users can view a dedicated feed of just the conversations happening on their own instance (server), in addition to those happening more broadly across federated servers (those servers their local server knows about and is connected to).

In addition, Medium said it would tackle some of the onboarding challenges involved with joining Mastodon by making it easier for newcomers to find both the people and topics that matched their interests as part of its onboarding flow.

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That's an area others have begun to tackle, as well, as they aim to capitalize on the potential of the decentralized web. Last week, for example, the magazine app Flipboard announced it would launch its own instance on flipboard.social to address similar concerns. The new Mozilla-backed Mastodon mobile app Mammoth additionally features an onboarding experience that aims to simplify sign-up by sharing suggestions of who to follow from across different categories.

But while there are some similarities with these other Fediverse plays, Medium is the first major tech company to offer users a "premium" Mastodon experience -- meaning access to the instance isn't free as it is elsewhere when signing up directly. Instead, interested users would have to purchase a Medium membership, which currently runs $5 USD per month or $50 per year with its annual plan.

The company believes the exclusivity and the community it will curate on its instance will have immediate value. Already, it's quietly onboarded 5,000 people from its waitlist onto the instance and is forecasting a community in the "six figures" in size at some point later this year.

Image Credits: Medium

"We want Medium to be the best place to read and write on the internet," Medium CEO Tony Stubblebine tells TechCrunch. "We want to do it under a single subscription -- I think people are tired of having dozens of subscriptions. And I think we've also found that ad-driven models have their own kind of corrupting influence," he continues. "I think that's why a lot of social media ends up toxic -- because people are focused on engagement, rather than substance. So, in order to have the best place to read and write, you have to build the whole thing around an economic model for substance. For us, that means a subscription," Stubblebine adds.

Plus, the exec points out, the instance will be among those run by an experienced tech company. That means it will run the instance on its own infrastructure and will have its own Trust & Safety team managing moderation. (Today, there's one person dedicated to the task, but it could scale in time.)

Stubblebine notes, too, that instance's domain name -- me.dm -- could have a draw.

"You have to share the domain along with your username in the Fediverse. To have a short domain is valuable," he says.

Image Credits: Medium

Betting on a federated future