I'm sure there's a tendency to always view the past as better, but the social-media-ification of the Internet has really sucked a lot of the joy out of entertaining people. When it was peripheral to the broader Internet, you spent most of your time making stuff. Now you gotta learn 8 to 12 platforms that mostly want you to act like an employee of their algorithm.
It's bad for consumers too, I think. Reddit has recently gone more in this direction and now I have beloved small reddits that don't pop up on my feed, and meanwhile it's trying to get me to watch videos of people making stupid food recipes, half-true mystery factoids, aliens, personal gossip-sharing, etc. I assume they do this because it works but it's seriously degraded the experience.
How to rebel? That's the question. Personally, I'm leaning into making more depthy more thoughtful stuff. Bea Wolf - longform poetry. A City on Mars - a three-year research project. Oddly, traditional publishing feels like part of the rebellion, because even a bottomline-obsessed publisher still gives a damn about what's in the books and what it says about them. They look bad and feel bad about making trash. Social media breaks that relationship.
One more thing that sucks? Because I can't directly tell my followers about new books and things anymore, since almost nobody reads RSS and facebook/twitter/instagram only feed people viral content, I have to be *way more annoying*. Have you noticed how authors don't just make books but have to *become their books* in online branding personae for months at a time? That's because it's the only way to reach you.
@ZachWeinersmith What do you think of a newsletter or similar? A list of people that have opted in to get information directly from you.
@rafa_font Yes! Newsletters and podcasts have grown a lot, which is funny because it's like 1990s internet resurrected.

@ZachWeinersmith Maybe this is my point: no need to learn 12 platforms. Keep the core one, the one which grants you more direct access and is more respectful, and that would be the newsletter.

Then for more personal usage choose the one you like best (Mastodon obviously 😁)

I would still have doubts about Substack. I think they go in the right direction but I'm not fully convinced (I use it though).