Just a day after Unity announced it would be laying off 1,800 employees as part of an ongoing “company reset”, it’s bei…

  • Kalkaline @leminal.space
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    11 months ago

    100% agree, but the alternative is giving the average user moderation power and hoping they do a good job at it, or not moderate at all.

    • vexikron
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      11 months ago

      Thats /an/ alternative.

      Another alternative is /social networks this large should not exist/.

      There are many, many other alternatives.

      Its just that social networks this large have basically destroyed the brains of people who use them, so now they can hardly imagine alternatives.

      And that is /another/ argument for why they shouldnt exist, the fact that they normalize themselves they way social and cultural institutions do, but with no actual accountability the way that local and state governments at least theoretically do.

      This is also an explanation of why such things are not likely to go away. In addition to being addictive at an individual level, the network effect causes peer pressure to engage more, and otherisizes those who do not and makes them social outcasts, at least amongst the relevant ages ranges for given platforms, but this has also already become more pervasive in matters of direct economic importance, with many companies not hiring, and apartments not renting if they cannot first verify your social media presence on these large platforms.

      To slightly inaccurately quote Morpheus from Deus Ex:

      The human being desires judgement, without this, group cohesion is impossible, and thus, civilization.

      At first you (humans) worshipped Gods, then, the fame and fortune of others. Next, it will be autonomous systems of surveillance, pervasive everywhere.

      Welp, turns out that real life mass scale social media networks literally are a hybrid or synthesis of the elements of the latter two mechanisms of social reverence/judgement.