MK
@mkay
MK
@mkay
It’s never felt more plausible that the age of social media might end—and soon.
Social media was never a natural way to work, play, and socialize, though it did become second nature.
The shift began 20 years ago or so, when networked computers became sufficiently ubiquitous that people began using them to build and manage relationships. Social
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music streaming and
Welcome to the flat era of fashion. Flat is what happens when consumers buy clothing on the basis of how it looks in two dimensions, in an image to be shared on social media.
![Thumbnail of Towards Recommender System Optimization: Our Data Tool for Algorithmic Optimization on Spotify [Part 1]](https://uploads-ssl.webflow.com/6206e1343aa2f122195717f8/6310b1a1447a22ac785a50ae_alina-grubnyak-ZiQkhI7417A-unsplash%20(1).jpg)
It’s become something of a sport to unearth these sorts of replies, the ones where strangers make willfully decontextualized moral judgments on other people’s lives. We give these people and these kinds of conversations names: “chronically online” or “terminally online,” implying that too much exposure to too many people’s weird ideas makes us all
... See moreWhen we dress to be photographed, we increasingly dress to be distributed as an image, and thus transformed into a kind of ad.
Truly democratizing cultural creativity, one might argue, would promote the development of skills and capacities rather than minimize the need for them.
The inherent contextlessness of platforms like Twitter also works in the opposite direction, though: It’s easy to use the language of social justice to justify anything we want, and by doing so, weakens real, meaningful activism.