‘I blame Facebook’: Aaron Sorkin is writing a Social Network sequel for the post-Zuckerberg era
‘I blame Facebook’: Aaron Sorkin is writing a Social Network sequel for the post-Zuckerberg era

The Facebook movie that Mark Zuckerberg called ‘hurtful’ is getting a sequel about the broken social network

Use !friendica@lemmy.ca instead!
Let's fucking go
@ryanee@anonsys.net also relevant a Meta whistleblower testifying in front of Congress
Your link is borked. Here's a fixed version: https://www.c-span.org/program/senate-committee/meta-whistleblower-testifies-on-facebook-practices/658354
But at the same time in every case I described on Lemmy an experience not maximizing engagement by maximizing conflict, I was downvoted to hell's basement. Despite two of three modern social media experience models being too aimed for that, that'd be Facebook-like and Reddit-like, excluding Twitter-like (which is unfortunately vulnerable to bots). I mean, there's less conflict on fucking imageboards, those were at some point considered among most toxic places in the interwebs.
(Something-something Usenet-like namespaces instead of existing communities tied to instances, something-something identities too not tied to instances and being cryptographic, something-something subjective moderation (subscribing to moderation authorities you choose, would feel similar to joining a group, one can even have in the UI a few combinations of the same namespace and a few different moderation authorities for it), something-something a bigger role of client-side moderation (ignoring in the UI those people you don't like). Ideally what really gets removed and not propagated to anyone would be stuff like calls for mass murders, stolen credentials, gore, real rape and CP. The "posting to a namespace versus posting to an owned community" dichotomy is important. The latter causes a "capture the field" reaction from humans.)
...And under the current model, the egos of mods get crazy big as they see their
communityarmy grow bigger and they can shape it how they want, even stackoverflow suffered and developers left in droves long before LLM took its place.I do miss the original imageboards though that used
sage
and was a community driven effort into moderation.