this post was submitted on 06 Aug 2023
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Hot take: if you want to get rid of the outrage, get rid of the stupid.
Decontextualisation might be the fuel of the outrage fire, but it only thrives in an atmosphere full of stupidity.
And by "stupidity" in this case I mean four things:
Does this remind you guys of any social network out there? It does, for me; all of the corporation-controlled ones are mostly inhabited by users like this. They were tailored for the stupid.
Problem with attacking stupidity is its not necessarily fixable. We do not attack people over things they cannot change, like the color of their skin or their sexual orientation.
How do they change their innate intelligence? We're not all gifted with the same amount. Can your system apply to someone who takes 5 minutes to learn the definition of even one new word? Someone who needed remedial classes, because the average classes were beyond their ability?
We need a system that allows for them too. So, asking for intelligence is asking too much, so that the execution of the method is easily within everyone's capabilities. Thus, back to the drawing board.
In large part, the stupidity that I'm talking about is not something innate, a lack of mental ableness. It's a bunch of shitty habits, related to how we've been trained. Traditional social media trained us to engage in those habits, and in the same form I think that healthy social environment should train us to avoid them.
Just like people would look at you and say "eeeew, can you not do that?" if you pick your nose in public, we should be doing the same towards people oversimplifying matters, or ignoring the context.
(The people that you're talking about - the ones with learning disabilities - are the least concern here. They usually know that they don't know.)
It always struck me as kinda insane how much microblogging seemed perfectly designed for all four of those phenomena and yet was widely embraced and loved.
Exactly. 280 characters*, replies being seen without the text that they reply to, the mess that you see when you look at a random hashtag... and perhaps not surprisingly those are things that Mastodon addressed. The difference is blatant - explain something poorly in Mastodon and people will either ignore you or say "what do you mean by that?"; do it in Twitter and you'll see an angry mob waving pitchforks.
*Thankfully Elon Musk is a moron and inadvertently fixed this, by increasing the character limit. If he knew what he was doing he wouldn't do it.