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16 votes
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I would very much like something akin to TikTok that's subscriber based and without infinite scroll
I'm thinking something I could use for news, with a feed that I curate myself. I'd open the app in the morning and see that I have a feed with five newstoks in it. I swipe to the first one,...
I'm thinking something I could use for news, with a feed that I curate myself. I'd open the app in the morning and see that I have a feed with five newstoks in it. I swipe to the first one, general updates from my local news, swipe for the weather, swipe for sports, etc. They'd all be short-form, and take the same amount of time it would take me to skim a newspaper. Once I get through each "card," my feed is done and I can put the app down and go about my day.
I could curate this feed to contain only the sources I want, and ideally content would not be user-generated, and instead more akin to traditional television with regularly scheduled programs. Then I can check at breakfast and see all the early news programs, check at lunch and see mid-day content, and ditto for the evening.
I'm not going to ruminate about social media, content, and news, but this would be a very refreshing change of pace instead of constantly being protective of my time, since everything is designed to suck away as much of it as possible.
A guy can dream, right?
15 votes -
Butterflies: An AI social network
11 votes -
Instagram is not a cigarette
11 votes -
Orkut’s founder is still dreaming of a social media utopia
20 votes -
Meta hit with Norwegian complaint over its plans to use images and posts of users on Facebook and Instagram to train artificial intelligence models
27 votes -
YouTube tests harder-to-block server-side ad injection in videos
72 votes -
New York passes legislation that would ban 'addictive' social media algorithms for kids
51 votes -
How influencer cartels manipulate social media: fraudulent behaviour hidden in plain sight
19 votes -
Reddit shares soar 14% after company reports revenue pop in debut earnings report
32 votes -
Taiwan, on China’s doorstep, is dealing with TikTok its own way
11 votes -
Reddit inks partnership with ChatGPT owner OpenAI
26 votes -
Jack Dorsey quits Bluesky board and urges users to stay on Elon Musk's X
70 votes -
Case before Norway's Supreme Court claims that depriving sex offender of a Snapchat account is unlawful under the European Convention on Human Rights
15 votes -
Was there a trojan horse hidden in US Section 230 all along that could enable adversarial interoperability?
16 votes -
Reddit, AI spam bots explore new ways to show ads in your feed
61 votes -
A lawsuit argues Meta is required by law to let you control your own feed
30 votes -
Meta in Myanmar, Part II: The Crisis
8 votes -
I don't think I'm 'grokking' how the fediverse works. (Or at least, how following federated accounts works)
I'm taking some time to set up a mastodon account, and am currently confused about how following other federated accounts is supposed to work. Let's use https://lemmy.world/c/comicstrips as an...
I'm taking some time to set up a mastodon account, and am currently confused about how following other federated accounts is supposed to work.
Let's use https://lemmy.world/c/comicstrips as an example. I go to that link and I see posts from other federated sites, as well as posts made directly on lemmy.world (I presume). I can also view all posts from that community in r.nf as well (https://r.nf/c/comicstrips@lemmy.world). I see all the same posts from the lemmy link.
What I don't understand is why, when I follow @comicstrips@lemmy.world on mastodon I only ever am shown replies and boosts from the account. I don't see the original image post, which I was expecting.
What am I missing? For what it's worth I'm using Phanpy to interact with mastodon, but am experiencing the same behavior on mastodon.social as well.
17 votes -
FYI: This site claims to have harvested 4B+ Discord chats, today all yours for a price
41 votes -
To make sure grandmas like his don't get conned, he scams the scammers
25 votes -
Two popular Danish television presenters have reported Meta to the police after finding their images and words had been manipulated and misused in thousands of Facebook ads
29 votes -
Discord to start showing ads for gamers to boost revenue
62 votes -
Fedi Garden to instance admins: “Block Threads to remain listed”
23 votes -
You don't need to document everything
31 votes -
Florida latest to restrict social media for kids as legal battle looms
22 votes -
Lego requests California police department stop using their toy heads to cover suspect mugshots on social media
40 votes -
Reddit pops as much as 70% in NYSE debut after selling shares at top of range
37 votes -
US judge rules YouTube, Facebook and Reddit must face lawsuits claiming they helped radicalize a mass shooter
47 votes -
Time to delete your Glassdoor account and data
102 votes -
Tell US Congress: Stop the TikTok ban
32 votes -
The end of the MrBeast era
39 votes -
Refund fraud schemes promoted on TikTok, Telegram are costing Amazon and other retailers billions of dollars
37 votes -
Once more with feeling: Banning TikTok is unconstitutional and won’t do shit to deal with any actual threats
24 votes -
Can Reddit survive its own IPO?
22 votes -
House passes bill that could ban TikTok in the US, sending it to the Senate
45 votes -
Feeeed is a reader app that goes beyond tracking RSS feeds
18 votes -
On popular online platforms, predatory groups coerce children into self-harm
15 votes -
Reddit is letting power users in on its IPO
38 votes -
Generative AI - We aren’t ready
27 votes -
Facebook, Instagram, Messenger and Threads down in widespread outage
14 votes -
Is an ethical social media platform even possible?
I've long been uncomfortable using platforms that have a bad reputation with respect to: Human rights / genocide Disinformation Privacy All three of those can be connected with advertising...
I've long been uncomfortable using platforms that have a bad reputation with respect to:
- Human rights / genocide
- Disinformation
- Privacy
All three of those can be connected with advertising revenue, among other things. When I use platforms that are shady in this regard, I know I'm colluding with them and contributing to the problems they create. So it's been a relief to see new platforms like Tildes emerge, as well as those based on ActivityPub.
But even platforms that don't have overt advertising (Telegram?) do have a problem with hate groups that go unchallenged. And I know that if I was running an instance of an ActivityPub compatible platform such as KBin, I mightn't be able to keep on top of moderating things like disinformation.
So I suppose my question is, where do you draw the line? I've deleted my Twitter and Meta accounts and I'm exploring alternatives, but I'm not sure if I'm going from the darkness to the light, or just into shades of grey.
38 votes -
Tumblr to begin selling user content to AI generative service companies, opt-out will be per blog
75 votes -
Google cut a deal with Reddit for AI training data
23 votes -
Bluesky announces data federation for self-hosting
20 votes -
Exhausted Pakistani content moderators are now trying to find other work but have been unsuccessful because their experience isn’t transferable
12 votes -
Reddit has a new AI training deal to sell user content
67 votes -
The majority of traffic from Elon Musk's X may have been fake during the US Super Bowl, report suggests
50 votes -
Does anyone else have posting anxiety?
To preface, I have accounts on multiple link aggregators, three microblogging platforms, and I have my own (transiently online) blog. I'm a member of more niche Discord servers than I can count,...
To preface, I have accounts on multiple link aggregators, three microblogging platforms, and I have my own (transiently online) blog. I'm a member of more niche Discord servers than I can count, and I'm in a few other nooks where people generally seem to gather and talk. Despite all that, I find that it's incredibly rare that I ever actually participate in any of the discussions that I see taking place, and that's something that I think I'd like to change.
I think part of the problem is that I grew up in the formative years of the "modern" net, and was always taught that you should be careful about what you say online (and, implicitly, that saying nothing is probably even better), lest an axe murderer track you down and explodify your tibia while you sleep.
So, does anyone else, or have stories about, posting anxiety? Anyone gotten over it? Am I just crazy?
81 votes -
Diseconomies of scale in fraud, spam, support, and moderation
14 votes