It’s been a weird couple days; I keep running into this talking point that “journalists won’t use Mastodon unless we incentivize engagement farming”.

Meanwhile I’m having a *great* experience here, because I use it to— I dunno— actually talk to people and form relationships?

I reject the premise that mastodon isn’t useful for reporters. I think it’s more accurate that modern news orgs use social media in purely extractive ways.

You might get more reporters that way, but you won’t like them.

And I mean, is that really want you want? Or is it just what you’re used to?

I think if we’re honest with ourselves, the “service” most reporters provide on social media is entirely self-serving. A one-way firehose of signal boosting and self promotion.

“Look at me! I wrote this story. Click on it!”
And then you ask them a question, or have a correction, and nobody reads it, because Wired doesn’t care about building a community, just reaching a consumer. It’s fire and forget.

We already have a tool for that, it’s RSS. What value does reposting a link here provide?

@Haste I wasn't on Twitter before its downfall, but from what I've heard I got the impression that microblogging was a two-way street with journalists, scientists and 'common' folk.

It probably was more like you are suggesting though. But it does make me wonder if early Twitter really was less self-serving in a way.

@odd I’m not sure. I wasn’t on Twitter in the early days. By the time I got there it already sucked. lol

I did get to experience invite-only Bluesky, but I can’t really comment on it from a reporting standpoint because I only used it to shitpost. Which was very community oriented, but totally devoid of professional value.

Mastodon really is the only place I’ve had any interest in my work and I just assume that’s cause I’m pals with folks that live in Seattle here.

@Haste @odd when twitter was smaller, two way conversation was indeed more common, there was
more a vibe of experimentation and play- and the rules were a bit different than how it is now:

no pictures, no replies, no retweets, no search, and history only could go back about 100 posts.

as soon as retweets, replies and search got added, the vibe got less fun because retweets let dumb throwaway remarks go “viral”, blind replies turned virality into pile ons, and search enabled kiwifarms style analysis of targets

@bri7 @odd I bet the internet itself is also kind of different than back then. I don’t have a base for comparison with twitter but I encountered this recently going back to play WoW.

It’s like.. the sewage we’ve all been wading in has made people more cautious and cynical. So it’s kind of just harder to talk to strangers than it used to be online?

At least, it’s hard to imagine using the internet in some of the ways that used to feel normal.

@Haste @bri7 @odd

Because there is no way to _know_ who anyone actually *is* in an online enviro now. The only way to be sure who anyone is, online, is to know them irl. Voice, video, images, identity- it can all be easily faked now. The world of posting up yr pic in a gaming or a hobby forum (what's left of them) and making close LD friends is pretty over. Sharing your voice, image and personal life now is just setting yourself up as a target for fraud. Sux, but that is the internet today.

@kitkat_blue @Haste @bri7 @odd

I remember thinking this as I chose my "Forever Handle" for Geocities around 1995. It took me until 2007 apparently to buy mycotropic.com but I've been mycotropic since /area51. What I thought was "this internet thing is awesome but people are going to be assholes to each other forever if it's always anonymous. My thinking was to always use one name and only tell people I wanted who mycotropic is IRL.

Anonymity is what killed Twitter for me amongst other things including doxxing but these days that anonymity is a minor protection given we decided to let fascism run the US.

Fascinating to have watched this develop over time though!

@mycotropic

Incidentally, your domain, mycotropic.com comes up as a "suspicious page" with an unmatched security cert. But mycotropic.org does not (if that is also yours idk) Don't know if you care, but you are probably losing visitors because of that.

@kitkat_blue

I've never used it except as an email address, I should probably clean my whole pile of domains up shouldn't I!
Thanks!

@mycotropic

Haha! Only if you don't want scary anti-virus notes popping up for your visitors! 😜 And You're very welcome. 😸