Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Charles Hugh Smith's avatar

Thank you, Ugo, for the clear explanation of the links between mimetics and FB/social media. I would add this dynamic:: for a great many people, their selfhood and identity is now dependent on their social media presence. Stripped of a social media presence and "likes" (positive feedback that yes, I exist and am worthy of attention), an important source of their sense of self and identity is lost. Once deplatformed, involuntarily or voluntarily, they are shipped to what I call "digital Siberia." Those few of us with independent web presences (blogs, vlogs, etc.) that are not platform-dependent have the equivalent of a ham radio in our attic: a few people might receive our weak signals. Those without truly stand-alone digital "selfhoods / identities" have no backup and so their sense of loss in being deplatformed may be profound. I started thinking about these topics some years ago, for example in this post from February 2011: 800 Million Channels of Me https://www.oftwominds.com/blogfeb11/800-million-channels-of-me2-11.html

Following this line of thinking, perhaps FB et al. won't collapse until there is a non-profit-maximizing platform they can use, the equivalent of a public utility that is managed transparently and that treats every user the same. Thank you for all you do-- warm regards, Charles Hugh Smith https://charleshughsmith.substack.com/

Expand full comment
Transcriber B's avatar

I appreciate your explanations and illustrations. What prompted me to leave, and this was many years ago (with an account under another name), was that FB fiddled around with the algorithms such that I couldn't be sure if my posts were reaching my followers. So I switched back to using email and a newsletter. As for my personal friends and family interacting with me on FB, I figured my leaving FB would be a useful test of the relationship. It was.

Expand full comment
19 more comments...

No posts