Between Elon destroying Twitter, another crypto exchange (FTX) revealed as an over-leveraged Ponzi scheme, and the failure of most of the neo-fascist election deniers to secure enough votes to actually win office, it feels like this week we may have finally reached the end of an era, and the grifters will finally have to face some consequences. Who knows, maybe Trump will actually serve some time, too — he’s certainly lost his grip on his party. Maybe the spell is broken?

I want to be clear that I’m not celebrating anyone losing their job at Facebook, Twitter, Amazon, or any of the other Big Tech firms that have dominated our online lives, now facing a contracting market.

I'm simply pointing out that these surveillance capitalism companies who’ve made money spreading misinformation and outrage may have reached a limit to what they can monetize at the expense of civil society and healthy social relationships.

@stratofax it would be nice to believe you’re right but I believe the trend shows that they just get better at hiding their surveillance mechanics within simple to use yet relatively pointless services. Heck, we’ve been willing participants for nearly two decades, providing information and asking for nil in return. What’s the motivation to change now? Also, its okay to be ambivalent towards those being laid off. Regardless of their stance on the moral/ethical abuses perpetrated
@stratofax in the name of capitalism, I can’t believe so many of them have been under a rock these dozens of years. Its been a slow burn and they’ve all been constructing this system of data theft. If I found out my bosses were abhorrent people, I wouldn’t hold it against anyone else for hoping they fail. Its the individuals cross to bare. Personally speaking, I hope that they can find jobs to feed, clothes, and house themselves as quickly as possible but I don’t think
@stratofax I’m being very prophetic or breaking new ground when I say we’re dangerously close to making all the same mistakes in even more gloriously fucked up new ways.

@AndrewMartin I agree -- we're not about to enter some glorious utopia where social media is awesome and everybody gets along all of a sudden.

Yet, it feels like something is shifting, and the existence (and success) of Mastodon, for example, shows that there are other ways to build a social network that doesn't spew toxic effluent into our culture and democracy so a handful of shareholders can make obscene profits.