"I dunno" by Brad Frost http://bradfrost.com/blog/post/i-dunno/
I think one phenomenon of social media is that many blog posts are written for a particular purpose: either marketing (pro-something) or a hatchet job (anti-something). When people read your writing, they might try to lump it into one of these categories, and then use it as a totem to start arguing for one position or the other.
I've experienced this many times: the feeling of being made a caricature for the benefit of someone else's argument.
The marketing posts exists because, well, that's the business model of social media. The hatchet job posts exist because controversy is a reliable way to get eyeballs, which is the business model of most of the web. Corral both of these groups into an angry thread where they take a swing at each other, and you've also got a recipe for keeping eyeballs on the social media site itself.
In short, it feels like conflict is endemic to social media.
The irony here is that I'm on Mastodon (a social media platform) largely because I dislike social media. Mastodon is the only one I use.
I like to believe we're building something better here, but something I look around at the way people treat each other and I'm not so sure.
All I can do is try to boost/write the kind of stuff I would like to see more of on social media. Be the change you wanna see, yada yada. Fin.
@rigelk I think it's self-defeating though. You can't make peace by waging war. The medium is the message. I realized this on Twitter when I saw the futility of promoting non-Twitter options by using Twitter itself.
@rigelk Well, maybe I'm wrong about that. I found out about Mastodon because of Twitter, after all. But I strongly feel that if you care about compassion and tolerance, you should practice it in the way you treat others.
@nolan I can only agree with that. But that only works when you want to build something *together*. If two groups don't want to share the same space whatever the reason, it's not gonna happen. Mastodon at least provides way to split the space for saner discourse to happen. Twitter feels more like a Battle royale where.
@rigelk I totally agree. Twitter feels like one big stadium where everybody dukes it out. The fediverse allows people to splinter off and form their own sub-communities. I think the value of this model is underrated.
@ocdtrekkie @nolan @rigelk (100% not replying to start a fight, honest) I was one of the people saying that about tech and CWs. tbh, it's probably a mix of my fumbling the user controls around filtering things out, plus old dramas (many of which are rooted in twitter migration) going back to april 2017 or before.
I can make a case for it (and did), the problem with forcing that case is that it's very likely...not helping anybody to do that, tbh. So I'm not, and have no plans to, either.
@nolan @rigelk there needs to be better education about the tools available. i wouldn't be surprised if the vast majority of people have never tried to use regex, for example. same might go for hiding boosts from <user>, because of it being relatively new.
there probably needs to be more refined user control, but that gets into hacking ActivityPub, which is already happening, but it's a process.
@sullybiker Yeah one thing I realized about FOMO on Twitter is that it was often "fear of missing out on today's hot drama."
@sullybiker I like to imagine that people don't really have a "need" to yell at one another, and that it's only a byproduct of the business model of commercial social media. But maybe you're right, and as Jon Ronson said, "A day without a shaming began to feel like a day picking fingernails." https://youtu.be/wAIP6fI0NAI
@sullybiker @nolan While FB and TW feels like a city. Mastodon is more like a village where everyone knows everyone. Or should I say a community of villages.... so I don't think we can compare social media with social media in that respect. Mastodon is also non-commercial.
The yelling/arguing is unavoidable and has part in the evolution of every organization or group. Tuckman's stage theory. This is something I've seen in pretty much every org I been a member of (incl. work).
@sullybiker It's exhausting being plugged into something that tries to engage all your most extreme senses all at once. Like going into a candy shop and eating something super sweet, super sour, and super bitter every morning.
@nolan I have a feeling your mild frustration can be explained by substituting "social media" with "people"…
@nolan unfortunately people are people. There's also the problem that once a social network get big enough it stops being a party with your friends and a few new people and turns into a stadium filled with football (soccer) hooligans.
@nolan This is why I run my own; I might not be as active a moderator for it as I should be, but what I want is a community of people who are considerate of others. I think I've been succeeding decently well.
@nolan so far most of the drama on Mastodon has been because people care about making a better platform. That's not ever happening on Twitter.