Federating Governance: How Community Rules Scale with Mastodon Instances

2026-06-03Social and Information Networks

Social and Information NetworksComputers and Society
AI summary

The authors studied how rules for handling bad behavior change as Mastodon communities grow. They found that no matter the size, communities focus mostly on stopping things like harassment and hate speech. Bigger communities have more detailed and diverse rules, but these rules can be harder to read and less varied in language. Interactions with other communities don’t change the rules much. Overall, the authors suggest that the size of the community mainly shapes how self-governance works, similar to patterns seen on other platforms like Reddit.

decentralized social mediaMastodonmoderationcommunity rulesself-governancecontent policyfederationrule formalizationonline communitiesscaling
Authors
Rasika Muralidharan, Yong-Yeol Ahn, Bao Tran Truong
Abstract
The rise of decentralized social media platforms like Mastodon and Bluesky highlights the challenge of scaling self-governance and moderation. As communities grow, they face new issues that demand increasingly complex governance structures. However, as moderation is mainly volunteer-driven, there is limited formal guidance on how community rules and moderation practices should evolve with growth. This study investigates how moderation scale with Mastodon instances by analyzing community rules across servers of varying sizes. We categorize these rules to identify key governance priorities and find that these priorities are remarkably consistent across instance sizes: rules addressing problematic content, such as harassment, hate speech, and illegal content, dominate regardless of scale. While smaller communities focus on narrower sets of topics, larger servers maintain a more balanced coverage of a broad range of topics. Our analysis of rule formalization reveals that community size strongly predicts rule development. As instances grow, their rules become more extensive and topically diverse, but also exhibit lower readability and linguistic diversity. In contrast, external federation interactions have a limited role, mainly associated with a broader scope of rules without substantially affecting their diversity or form. These findings highlight the relative influence of internal versus external factors, suggesting that local scaling pressures outweigh network-level dynamics in decentralized social media governance. The scaling pattern observed on Mastodon resemble those previously identified on centralized platforms such as Reddit, suggesting that community size imposes fundamental constraints on self-governance that transcend platform architectures