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i think the kneejerk, trying-to-be-constructive, be-the-change reaction to this is: "oh, just don't do that here!"
like, "yeah! this is farcaster! be yourself! enjoy the fact that this place is still relatively obscure, and let emergence build a new audience around... whoever you wanna be!"
which is... a pretty good strategy, tbh.
in fact, if you're reading this thread and still aren't really sure what you're doing on farcaster, then i fully recommend just casting into the void about whatever shit makes you happy — and giving your joy an opportunity to become a "homegrown hero", as @accountless.eth might say.
BUT.
this framing also COMPLETELY sidesteps the "what's my reputation gonna be?" anxiety — and i think failing to address that feeling gives it a prime opportunity to work against us.
i also think this kind of anxiety is an automatic and subconscious reaction, rather than a conjured worry (i.e. overthinking), so logic won't defeat it — a need needs to be addressed before it will go away. 1 reply
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and, now, i know it's been a journey, but let's wrap back around to my original thesis:
what we want, as users, is less anonymity.
we want:
- the people we interact with to know us.
- to know the people we interact with.
- to be identifiable by like-minded people.
and, tbh, i think this thesis is going to wrap up with a huge caveat that privacy infrastructure appears to be a functional requirement for this version of the cozyweb.
yeah, one possible /reframing is for sure "users want more privacy."
but i'm not rewriting this thread to be less clickbaity, it's nearly done now, lol.
anyway, "being better known online" checks this "belonging" box pretty neatly: the more confidence we have that our audience is actually SEEING us, the more we can be assured that their match-my-freak is actually for *us*.
and when our identities are less present in what we do (ie. our "context is collapsed"), we start to lose our humanity. our spark.
that's why we work so hard to find our tribe online: masking is exhausting. 1 reply
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