
Originally Posted by
cspan37421
Coincidentally, Democracy in America is my nightstand book, and I was just reading the section on associations last night. Maybe I'll go re-read it in light of this discussion. I am really amazed at the style of writing and breadth of observation, for the time. I've not seen writing from that era or earlier quite like it, but then again I was not a history major.
We should not dislocate our arms patting ourselves on the back about DBR. If we were a near-unique oasis of calm, reasoned discussion we'd still have a PPB.
As with commenters above, I agree not all social media is the same. I'm pretty torn about real names policies, because on the one hand, elimination of anonymity really does take a lot of hot air out of those who want to incite stuff or spread BS without consequence. On the other hand I do know enough history to know that a lot of truths were put to paper anonymously in the early years of this country, so it can do some good by giving space to unpopular truths.
Generally, I've found that moderated forums have fewer problems than other social media. Perhaps they could be made even better with a names policy, but you might lose some candid comments that way too. For instance, it's good to be able to cite a negative product experience without fear the manufacturer will sic their legal team on you. Anyway, I think forums may be the only form of social media I use actively. I don't look at FB, Twitter, IG, TikTok, ... not sure what else there is.
Platforms that are optimized for maximizing engagement: that's bad enough (stealing your time and attention - classic xkcd above), but then you can add the understanding that ginning up outrage and controversy maximizes engagement. Seems like we've hacked human cognition sufficiently to discover society's self-destruct button. Good luck out there everyone.