The strangest thing to me about our social tools and networks is how super-limited their feature-sets and philosophies have been in human terms.

It feels like designing a house entirely around the best use of new light-switch technology. How can we reinvent the bathmat???

It's weird.

https://erinkissane.com/all-this-unmobilized-love

Like, there are near-infinite and vastly more interesting ways to think about social systems and cultural patterns!

And the biggest recent departure from the deadly boring norm was literally "upload a picture, but only when your phone tells you to"

Anyway, this has obviously turned into my Main Thing for a minute, which is fine, I'll get back to bones later.

I linked to it in my most recent blog post, but reading @bkeegan & co's paper alongside a deep-ish dive on Ostrom has been really fruitful.

"This Place Does What It Was Built For": Designing Digital Institutions for Participatory Change

https://dl.acm.org/doi/abs/10.1145/3359134

@kissane @bkeegan It's almost like people who only study tech/STEM without being adequately exposed to social sciences, literature, etc. end up being narrow without realizing they're narrow (unlike the reverse: all English majors realize they're bad at math).