Here is my article about #Mastodon, the #Fediverse, and federalism for The Atlantic. I did NOT write the headline, which suggests the article is about Ben Franklin (never mentioned in the article) and Bluesky (mentioned a couple of times). LOL but I'm still really excited for you to read this!!! https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2023/05/social-media-centralism-fediverse/674041/
Social Media Has Entered Its Chaos Era

Facebook and Twitter seem less relevant by the day. They may be replaced by new “federated” platforms.

The Atlantic
@annaleen How did they come up with that headline tho. Ben Franklin?
@mhucka I have no idea. Honestly, this is a thing you have to understand: writers do not get to write their own headlines.

@annaleen @mhucka

One of the fastest ways for me to guess at a person's understanding of print and web journalism is to see who they believe writes headlines.

@NiftyLinks @annaleen @mhucka not to reply guy (as I reply guy) but I write my own headlines, as do most of the writers at CNET 🤷🏼

I’ve written headlines for my stories at other internet publications as well

Traditional newspapers and magazines, sure, but online it’s onlythe big guys like NYT and WaPO (and The Atlantic!) who have copy editors write heds /ime

@peterbutler @annaleen @mhucka Thanks! I'll update my expectations accordingly. :) My experience is in print journalism and it's pretty dated these days, too.
@NiftyLinks @annaleen @mhucka Yeah, it’s much more important in print because it’s gotta fit — I think that’s why it was traditionally left to copy editors — now we’re lucky if we even have copy editors. times are tight
@peterbutler @NiftyLinks @mhucka ugh so true. I always feel ridiculously lucky if I get fact checked and copyedited (both happened for this article).