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 I've lost track of how many efforts there were to create open source, democratized alternatives to Facebook and Twitter. It seems like the only way to get people to adopt is to force out the incumbent giant.
@bleskie @llebrun Who knew we could just taunt a billionaire man-child into buying the target site then watch as he speed runs it into the ground. πŸ˜‚
@Spiritech @bleskie @llebrun for three times what it was worth!