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Noah Mullins's avatar

I just keep coming back to thinking about what the internet was like when social media wasn't called "social media." The more traditional style of internet forums, newsgroups, IRC chats, etc had their own share of extremists, but it seems like the fragmentary nature of stuff back then slowed or sometimes stopped extremist views from going viral. Different communities had their own varying levels of moderation and the extremists knew they had to behave in normal communities. Normal people just stayed away from the extremist communities.

Today normal people who would never have sought out extremist views can now be radicalized and taken in because they share the same mass public forum with the extremists.

I don't know a good solution, but maybe fragmenting the social media landscape isn't a bad idea.

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JC's avatar

I feel like FD2 has a problem in that it the scale of social media is too huge. For the original FD, there can only be a small amount of people on air at one time, say four republicans vs one dem on the topic of gun control. Even though the dem is outnumbered, they still occupy 1/5 of the conversation, which is at least noticeable. With FD2, twitter could potentially ban 1k conservatives and balance that with 1 tankie, which isn’t much different than what we have now (although I would love to see the memes venerating the one chosen sacrificial leftie brought to the altar).

The easy solution to this is to instill a ratio, but that introduces a whole new host of problems. If there was another 1/6 and twitter had to suddenly ban 10k righty accounts, would they be forced to ban 1k innocent lefty accounts? That wouldn’t go over well. Or Twitter could could systematically ban hundreds of lefty accounts each month as to ensure that it all evens out in the case of another righty coup, but I feel like at that point FD2 becomes more about appeasement than parity.

And what is left and right anyways? It’s pretty easy to tell at this point in history with MAGA hashtags and hammer n sickle emojis and whatnot, but who knows what political transformations the world will go though in the next 10 plus years. Interesting to think how right/left would be defined and how we could write legislation to compensate for status quo shifts.

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