Facebook & Social Media

CANON_Grow

Well-Known Member
It would take something like that to make me watch that kind of bullshit.
I have VERY little faith in cryptoanimals existing...Satellites can spot a gum wrapper in a forest from orbit, but there's never been one pic of bigfoot, nessie, a yeti, a chupacabra, a hodag, gowrow, champ, or ogopogo...
The 50/500 rule pretty much dictates that in order for there to be a viable breeding population, people would be seeing these things..and they are not.
It explores the myth of Sasquatch, and how it was used by cannabis farms on Spy Rock Road.

 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Hey, did you guys see where twitter was changing it's name to ex?
Yeah, Elon wants to charge users a fee now, so it looks like it will be ex-twitter for most and the end of the place as Elon bankrupts it. Only the Russians will be paying for their bot accounts.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
I believe this site was founded in an idealist age of internet "freedom", live and learn... ;)


How to fix the internet
If we want online discourse to improve, we need to move beyond the big platforms.

The internet is good things. For me, it’s things I love, like Keyboard Cat and Double Rainbow. It’s personal blogs and LiveJournals; it’s AIM away messages and MySpace top 8s. It’s the distracted-girlfriend meme and a subreddit for “What is this bug?” It is a famous thread on a bodybuilding forum where meatheads argue about how many days are in a week. For others, it’s Call of Duty memes and the mindless entertainment of YouTubers like Mr. Beast, or a place to find the highly specific kind of ASMR video they never knew they wanted. It’s an anonymous supportive community for abuse victims, or laughing at Black Twitter’s memes about the Montgomery boat brawl, or trying new makeup techniques you learned on TikTok.

It’s also very bad things: 4chan and the Daily Stormer, revenge porn, fake news sites, racism on Reddit, eating disorder inspiration on Instagram, bullying, adults messaging kids on Roblox, harassment, scams, spam, incels, and increasingly needing to figure out if something is real or AI.

The bad things transcend mere rudeness or trolling. There is an epidemic of sadness, of loneliness, of meanness, that seems to self-reinforce in many online spaces. In some cases, it is truly life and death. The internet is where the next mass shooter is currently getting his ideas from the last mass shooter, who got them from the one before that, who got them from some of the earliest websites online. It’s an exhortation to genocide in a country where Facebook employed too few moderators who spoke the local language because it had prioritized growth over safety.

The existential problem is that both the best and worst parts of the internet exist for the same set of reasons, were developed with many of the same resources, and often grew in conjunction with each other. So where did the sickness come from? How did the internet get so … nasty? To untangle this, we have to go back to the early days of online discourse.
 
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