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Opinion | the Great Delusion Behind Twitter - The New York Times
11 highlights
A social network is an idle, inactive system—a Rolodex of contacts, a notebook of sales targets, a yearbook of possible soul mates. But social media is active—hyperactive, really—spewing material across those networks instead of leaving them alone until needed.
from The Age of Social Media Is Ending by The Atlantic
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 morefrom Every "chronically online" conversation is the same by Vox
Some invest a lot of time and skill in crafting TikTok videos, but neither time nor skill is required. If TikTok “enables everyone to be a creator,” as its former mission statement proclaimed, this is because creative labor on the platform has been automated and deskilled.
from Hyperconnected Culture and Its Discontents by Rogers Brubaker
Moreover, as the critic Rob Horning has argued with respect to TikTok, algorithms do not simply discern what we want and serve it to us; they train us to want what they can serve us. Successful platforms do not just discover what consumers want — they produce the consumers and the forms of consumer desire that they need.
from Hyperconnected Culture and Its Discontents by Rogers Brubaker
Towards Recommender System Optimization: Our Data Tool for Algorithmic Optimization on Spotify [Part 1]
3 highlights
A democratic cultural politics would be developmentalist — oriented to learning, growth and discovery — rather than presentist.
from Hyperconnected Culture and Its Discontents by Rogers Brubaker