P'shaw (she/they) (
pshaw_raven) wrote2019-05-19 11:32 am
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Can "Indie" Social Media Save Us? an interesting article by Cal Newport - soft paywall
I think there's a lot to be said in favor of recent ideas like the much-touted one of "break up Facebook," but to me the better question is "do we even need social media at all?" And I think the answer is "Nope." Jaron Lanier is correct in his assertion that social media is basically ruining everything - civilization, discourse, free time, and our brains. And the remedy for that may not be better social media platforms, but personal-level decisions to abandon it altogether. I don't know where this would leave things like Dreamwidth - though to be honest I see a difference between blogging platforms and social media ones.
I think there's a lot to be said in favor of recent ideas like the much-touted one of "break up Facebook," but to me the better question is "do we even need social media at all?" And I think the answer is "Nope." Jaron Lanier is correct in his assertion that social media is basically ruining everything - civilization, discourse, free time, and our brains. And the remedy for that may not be better social media platforms, but personal-level decisions to abandon it altogether. I don't know where this would leave things like Dreamwidth - though to be honest I see a difference between blogging platforms and social media ones.
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I feel like Dreamwidth (and Livejournal before it) straddles the line. There's obvious social aspects, like commenting and the whole idea of writing for other people to read. But at the same time, it takes a commitment to follow a DW blog that, say, a single Twitter feed doesn't, and I know if someone used their DW like Twitter I'd unsubscribe instantly. I did that to someone a decade ago who turned their LJ into a feed for their Twitter and I thought it was just inane drivel.
I mean, I love posting inane drivel on Twitter sometimes too. But I have a locked account and only talk to my friends, so I'm not the main audience for it.
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For example, I waited almost a day before responding to some comments on my own posts. Not because I needed a cooling off period, the comments weren't drama, just regular responses. But it seems as if DW allows you to have that space and time, whereas other networks and platforms are more geared to poking you for instant responses, deliberately driving reactions rather than allowing for thought.