That was a really good one. I absolutely agree that breaking things back up online would be so much more helpful to society. Smaller communities online were far better.
This is one thing I like about the Lemmy/Reddit format. It (somewhat) helps isolate different communities and esspecially on smaller instances/communities/subreddits making it easier to get to know people, as well as easier to moderate.
Our brains aren't truth detectors, they're survival engines.
How that plays into social media just blew my mind.
And? Is the video incorrect?
tl;dw - Bring back phpBB forums!
I went and didn't see what you meant. Most every comment agrees with the video.
It's funny, you are us vs theming. You are doing what the video talked about by making sweeping generalizations about a specific community based on your perception of their surrounding culture (reddit).
Nah, I'm good with my broken brain.
Yea, gimme dat good brain rot. I need 8 hours of adult cocomelon playing in the background on YouTube while I write screed on whatever the fuck they call Twitter now.
I learned a new word today!
Funny that the video saying large online social networks are ruining the fabric of our society ends with "Follow us on large online social media networks!" I guess they don't think unplugging from large social media is all that important after all.
Their videos are purely informative so I think they can get a pass on this one, better to spread awareness of these things than to not.
Tournesol is an open-source web tool by a non profit organization, aiming to evaluate the overall quality of the information in videos from community made comparisons, to fight against misinformation and dangerous content.
That was a really good one. I absolutely agree that breaking things back up online would be so much more helpful to society. Smaller communities online were far better.
This is one thing I like about the Lemmy/Reddit format. It (somewhat) helps isolate different communities and esspecially on smaller instances/communities/subreddits making it easier to get to know people, as well as easier to moderate.