I’ve posted earlier links on this subject here. Glenn Reynolds’s (Mr. Instapundit) USA column today expands on why he cancelled his
Twitter account. His opener:
I deactivated my Twitter account
about a week ago. I was partly acting on impulse, because the social media
site had just, for no obvious reason, “permanently
banned” someone I follow, something that seems to be happening more and
more.
But I was also acting on my growing belief that Twitter is, well,
horrible.
All social media have their issues.
The “walled garden” character they create is the antithesis of the traditional
Internet philosophy of openness. They are actually consciously designed to
be addictive to their users — one company that consults on such issues is
actually called Dopamine
Labs — and they tend to soak up a huge amount of time in largely
profitless strivings for likes and shares. They promote bad feelings and bad
behavior: I saw a cartoon listing social
media by deadly sins, with Facebook promoting envy, Instagram promoting
pride, Twitter promoting wrath, Tinder promoting lust and so on. It seemed
about right.
But as someone who spends a lot of
time on the internet and whose social media experience goes all the way back to
the original Orkut and Friendster, I think that Twitter is the worst.
In fact, if you set out to design a
platform that would poison America’s discourse and its politics, you’d be hard
pressed to come up with something more destructive than Twitter. Twitter has
the flaws of the old Usenet newsgroups, but on a much bigger scale.
The full column is here.
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