Content pfp
Content
@
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction

ted (not lasso) pfp
ted (not lasso)
@ted
half-baked* hot take: wei's status-as-a-service is a boomer theory that is becoming increasingly outdated *not high, just writing stream of consciousness yes, status-seeking behavior will always play a role in social media but it should not be the foundation upon which we build the future. as we grasp social media's psychological impact (a la haidt re: mental health issues, addictions, misinformation, etc), user behaviors and motivations will evolve against it. they already are. there's growing preference for intentional disconnection (opal, ~40% of users take digital detoxes), niche community platforms (substack, tyb), ephemeral content (bereal, stories), and private forms of sharing (locket, snapchat; dark social makes up 80% of outbound sharing). 88% of social users cite connecting with friends as their top motivation. what's the top reason for internet friendship? shared interests. and what matters far more than likes or followers in shared interest communities? quality and depth of content. wdyt?
29 replies
9 recasts
87 reactions

Maretus pfp
Maretus
@maretus.eth
Hard agree, but it seems like a challenging task to take on. Status seeking is human nature and finding a way to build something different seems like an uphill battle. Not that it shouldn’t be fought tho.
1 reply
0 recast
5 reactions

ted (not lasso) pfp
ted (not lasso)
@ted
social connection and belonging is also a fundamental human drive, perhaps more powerful than status seeking especially in close relationships or tight-knit communities i'm not saying status seeking isn't a fundamental human behavior, just that we shouldn't anchor everything around it
1 reply
1 recast
5 reactions