Trans Tech DIY

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Trans people can to build our own tech to serve our own needs. A community for meeting like-minded helpers & sharing what we learn.

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TransTechDIY: A concept (lemmy.blahaj.zone)
submitted 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

The premise is simple: we're all better off in a world where trans people know how to build our own technologies to suit the needs of our communities. Trans people are better off when we are well-connected and are able to DIY. And it's now more than ever important for us to learn how to DIY our tech the same way so many of us have DIY'd our hormones.

The most immediate threat I think many online trans communities are currently facing is deplatforming. Many have been lulled into a sense of dependency by large tech companies. Self-hosting seems like all too overwhelming, the fediverse seems overwhelming, the UIs are overwhelming, archiving data seems overwhelming, starting from scratch and building communities on new instances seems overwhelming, helping users who are less tech literate migrate to safe platforms seems overwhelming.

I would like to suggest this is a problem we can resolve. I think we could start small, and we could just share with each other various problems we see in our communities when it comes to technology—barriers to entry, designs that simply do not work, etc.—and the solutions we've found to help resolve them for each other.

Alternatively, if you're having a problem or facing resistance getting people onboarded in your communities—post about it! Let's have a chat. Maybe someone knows a matrix room you should be apart of. Maybe someone has dealt with a particular type of user apathy in a Discord they've modded & can provide some hard won lessons learned.

In the long run, I think this information could be collated into a wiki resource of sorts. Of course not trying to replace the many many resources out there for learning individual technologies. But more like a landing page for the trans community to get started fixing common problems.

However, I am of course still working on learning myself, so I think if this community grows it will be a function of who shows up and where things go.

Feel free to discuss or share feedback, it's just an idea at this point.

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Hi all! I wanted to open the floor for a discussion that's been on my mind lately & perhaps hear from others who are also curious about this problem

I think in online trans communities traditionally there has been a social barrier (moderation) but not a technical barrier (hosting/admin/etc).

What that means is that most communities have been run by one or two very burnt out moderators who stepped up to solve a social issue and don't know how to deal with the more technical side. This has worked—just barely—so far.

However I think in the long run this won't be sustainable. A community no longer needs someone to overcome the social barrier but now also the technical barrier AND explain to those solving the social barrier stuff why it's trustworthy. So we need to come up with ways to support them.

I think what @[email protected] is doing here is an invaluable piece of that puzzle. It gives those leaders a spot to land if they have nobody able to help them with self-hosting. But it's also scary for some communities, they don't know who to trust, and would benefit from a more tech-savvy trusted member in their group feeling empowered to learn, maybe set up a server themselves, evangelize a bit, offer reassurance they're committed to ensuring if blahaj goes down the community won't be screwed.

Something else I've noticed is that most communities do not have self-hosted landing pages either. Like a website that their community members can bookmark in case their community goes dark, where the admins can post information about where to meet up online next time. What I've been saying as a message is "yes most members won't bother bookmarking it, but a few will, and those users will be conscientious members who are more likely to spread the word so you limit your losses."

I think it could perhaps be a good project to work on, say, a template for a self-hosted page with a whole bunch of trans self-hosted resources, trans fediverse communities, landing pages for other communities, etc. collated so a community admin can copy-paste. It might encourage more of their members to bookmark it and begin using those resources casually. Of course, reaching out to the communities you are apart of outside the fediverse and offering to help sort out hosting a landing page is also a great asset especially if you're trusted/respected by the mods of those communities.

Anyway, these are all just thoughts at the moment, please feel free to chime in!

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Someone in my network had the following question I don't know how to help them with and neither does anyone in our group:

tech friends! can anyone explain to my layman ass what a “MIC link” is gut check is that it’s a site that can only be accessed w/ a secure browser like TOR, but i am truly unsure is that, like, a site that can only be accessed thru a browser like TOR or

If anyone thinks they might have an idea what it is and could explain in simple-ish terms that'd be a big help and could perhaps be collated to share with others in the future!