10 comments

  • mherkender 12 minutes ago

    This is an ad for Incogni

  • insickness 10 minutes ago

    To keep people engaged, social media platforms have shifted from showing you content from people you know to prioritizing viral content. The algorithms know viral content offers an endless stream of entertainment that keeps people scrolling longer.

      Smalltalker-80 4 minutes ago

      Like the writer I'm also a 'boomer' still keeping connected to an older friend group using Facebook and Instagram. For Facebook, I use the plugin "FB Purity" to filter out the generated cr*p posts and force chronological order. It's shocking too see how few posts are left, by agressive algorithm filtering and FB then deciding that "You're all caught up", refusing to show more posts. So my FB time is about 20 seconds every day...

  • halflife 18 minutes ago

    Back to 2015, I stopped posting on Facebook when I noticed that it’s no longer about connecting with my friends, but a never ending stream of boring posts from groups and people that I don’t know or care to follow.

    All my “social” life just moved to direct communication in WhatsApp (meta owned as well)

      rimeice 13 minutes ago

      2015 for me too. I wonder if there was some early day over juicing of the attention mechanism that put people off in that year, before they tuned it to reduce churn…

  • kalehmann an hour ago

    Not sure if I see a bad thing in this. I'd like too know what old friends are currently up to and checking their social media has been a way to do so during the golden age of facebook.

    Lately I feel more value in connecting with them personally, talking and letting them now, that I am still interested in what's going on for them.

      netsharc 2 minutes ago

      I wonder what would happen if: if I post 2 pieces of content, my friend would have to comment on the first one to see the next one.

      I suppose the app will then mostly be full of throwaway comments in the form of "Cool" or "Wow". But maybe add a modifier that if the poster doesn't have any meaningful reply to a commenter's (let's name him Elon) comment, then the poster's next content will not be shared with Elon next time.

      brunoarueira 16 minutes ago

      Yeah, I couldn't agree more. At the very least, it should be used occasionally to post things as a kind of "public memory," not to expose your entire life just for likes and exhibitionism.

  • Simulacra 16 minutes ago

    It seems like so much of social media is just individuals shouting into the void.

  • znpy 25 minutes ago

    Social media mostly polarise people (both women and men, in different ways) and generally speaking what you post will be used against you at some point.

    So yeah, no wonder that social media is dying. People are just catching up to the fact that the best way not to lose is to just not play the game.