“To the extent that people remain active on Twitter, they preserve the viability of Musk’s gambit. The illusory sense of community that still lingers on the platform is one of Musk’s most significant assets. No matter which side prevails, the true victor in any war is the person selling weapons to both sides.”

https://www.newyorker.com/news/daily-comment/why-i-quit-elon-musks-twitter

Why I Quit Elon Musk’s Twitter

Jelani Cobb writes about his recent decision to quit Elon Musk’s Twitter, a social-media platform that once represented the new frontier of digital democracy.

The New Yorker
@Jelaniya @Chanders I think this will be a core issue in the coming weeks. The migration is happening. The first transaction costs were met by many. But going full in and leaving twitter feels like a risk and potentially a real loss to many who spent time building a community. The long game is the real challenge.
@claesdevreese @Chanders Yeah but it’s like a rental community. The emotional attachment to the place may be significant but you’re really subject to the prerogatives of the landlord. In this case the new landlord is a real genital. Eventually the place will get so run down you’ll have to move on.
@Jelaniya @claesdevreese @Chanders from personal experience, the emotional attachment requires a little time to fade away. Months with Facebook, weeks with twitter. I feel I am halfway there.

@edgeoforever @Jelaniya @claesdevreese @Chanders

Agree with everything said. Frankly, I moved away from FB on Jan 7th, 2021. It was NOT as difficult as I thought it was.

Likewise with Twitter. In the end it took me on Tweet to convince me the "community" I had built there was not worth my personal #selfcare

@chukwumaonyeije @edgeoforever @claesdevreese @Chanders

Yeah, I dropped Fb after the Cambridge Analytica story broke.