I read possibly the most rage-bait-y take yesterday, and I almost responded.

But I'm trying to get better about not getting sucked in to rage bait, so I didn't respond.

But I did click through to the author's profile and see that he wasn't just some random user, he's an executive at the non-profit that manages Mastodon software development.

He came in with a very motte and bailey argument, where he made an absolutely outrageous and indefensible claim based on very little evidence, and then quickly covered it with a more defensible and evidence based claim.

But all through his post and the replies was the paternalistic, guilt tripping, shameful tone policing, again clearly and intentionally designed to conflate his pet issue with larger issues and goad people into conversation.

I have very little interest in discussing the topic he was discussing (ostensibly "journalists using the fediverse" but actually "AI proponents feeling unwelcome on the fediverse") but I do want to talk about emotional manipulation on social media, because it's a growing problem.

There was an implication in these posts that it would be a net good if "we" could attract journalists to use mastodon specifically.

Now, as I understand it, this dude's job is to make the fediverse seem like a serious contender in the social media sphere, so I can understand why he would want journalists here.

There's a problem with this logic though.

There are journalists here. There are a lot of them, even.

They're just not the same journalists that used twitter or currently use bluesky.

He doesn't want journalists to come to the fediverse and make friends and participate in the community, he wants to replicate Journalist Twitter.

He wants mastodon users to be accepting of and willing to embrace broadcast only users who are unwilling to build a network here.

That's not how the fediverse works. If you want people to see the things you have to say, you have to put in some work to be a person worth seeing.

He said that this problem, the community's unwillingness to embrace AI boosters, was also what kept Black users off of mastodon.

This is pure rage-bait. It's a false equivalence designed to shame people out of dealing substantively with the meat of his argument.

Now, I'm writing about the issue of racism on the fediverse from the perspective of a white admin on a small instance. I've been in this space for almost a decade and I have watched the struggle people of color have faced in the fediverse. I don't claim to be an authority here, and it is possible that I have misunderstood something.

That being said, Mastodon doesn't have a large Black userbase, because the network has a massive racism problem.

Part of that problem is the hundreds of rogue nazi instances that spring up and get hammered back every few months, but that's not the Bulk of the problem. A problem like that can be handled by some decent shared moderation tools (which we barely have, and only exist in spite of the efforts of the Mastodon project.)

The bulk of the racism problem on mastodon is a refusal by the volunteer admins and moderation teams that run large instances to learn enough about anti-Black racism to be able to treat it seriously, spot it, and remove the users who engage in it.

(Or, as I have found to be the case on multiple occasions, outright racism on the part of instance admins and moderation teams. Some instances seem all to willing to give the benefit of the doubt to a repeat offender who is white, and extra eager to ban a first time offender who isn't. )

But for an employee of the organization that is supposed to run the Mastodon software project to conflate people who don't like AI with the actual racism problem that his network and software perpetuate, is disgusting.

And I can't think of a reason to do that, unless your goal is to silence criticism.

But, again, I don't want to talk about this dude specifically or the things he said specifically.

I probably already blocked him, and if I haven't I will if he shows up to defend himself here.

I'm not going to provide a platform for that kind of manipulative, abusive nonsense.

I'm here to talk about manipulative and abusive nonsense in general.

Every other social media platform is built around Engagement as the number one metric.

The more interactions you get, the more comments, the more readers, the more views, the better. that's money in your pocket, or at least in the pocket of the people who run your network.

So, people are incentivized to say things that are horrible or otherwise indefensible, to bait you into watching, or responding, or sharing.

To keep them in the conversation, and to engage with the conversation on their terms.

Lots of people do this to try and farm engagement and *usually* it doesn't work very well here.

Part of the reason that it doesn't work very well here is that there is no algorithm here, there are only the things we choose to boost for one another to see.

We are the algorithm, here, and we can choose to opt out of these kinds of discussions by simply not engaging with them.

That's why I'm having this conversation out here, and not in the replies to his thread. I don't need him to know that what he said was vile. That doesn't help me prevent other people from falling for it.

This rage bait + false equivalence + outrageous claim that is quickly tampered by a more reasonable and defensible claim pattern is a propaganda technique.

It's what paid trolls do to stir the pot, and push people towards more extreme viewpoints. It is the way Joe Rogan makes his living.

(Outrageous claim or rage-bait gets taken out of context, then you go watch/listen to find out what the context is. Or you don't, and you just argue the contextless version, and his supporters who have listened to the context don't try to defend the Bailey, they fall back to the more defensible Motte and change the terms of the conversation, and in the process make you seem like you're trying to put words in someone's mouth!

Granted, those are words that person said and it's reasonable for you to want to engage with people on the terms that they set.

But, to some folks, it makes you look unreliable and makes Joe Rogan or whoever else look more reliable by comparison.)

@ajroach42 thank you for pointing out who was doing this. i've seen the thread and i assumed it was yet another drive-by diss by a twitter guy.
@fishidwardrobe Nah, he's an executive.
@ajroach42 worrying