The collapse of Twitter for (basically) self-inflicted reasons makes a strong case for building online infrastructure structured as a non-profit or public utility.

People rely on these platforms for public information, use them for democratic debate and many invest their livelihoods in them.

These platforms are too important to public safety, peoples’ livelihoods and democracy to leave in the hands of eccentric billionaires or the whims of stock markets.

@llebrun Absolutely agree.
I have even thought we, the people, the Twitter users, should actually campaign to get public ownership of Twitter.
@DystopicRedhead @llebrun I couldn't agree more- the fact that Twitter (& Facebook for that matter) haven't become public utilities, regulated by gov't oversight (solving the entire 'free speech' debate) & seen as the new 'public square' speaks to the overwhelming ownership companies & corporations have over our govt & 'elected' officials.
@lostatsea369 @llebrun Absolutely. We need to get back our online public space, our virtual square. It's so important for debate and democracy.