Twitter/Medium/Blogger co-founder Evan Williams told NYT that he’s sorry if Trump wouldn’t be president without having a Twitter account. His profile in the NYT dwells a lot on how the promise of mass media freedom offered by the largest corporate-owned social media/microblogging sites turned quickly into the toxicity we now know of.
I don’t know if the tech is to blame, since there are an insane number of factors which play roles in how this transition happened. I can cite how the ability to share posts allows users to irresponsibly traffic content which appeal to our base emotions. I can cite how corporate, centralized social networks – driven by advertisement-based profit motives – are the primary couriers of such disinformation and misinformation. I can cite how privacy and self-protection tools have not caught up with the exponential growth of these services.
The opinion from Cliff Watson in the article that these micro/blogging tools, even Williams’s current venture Medium, are relics from the apex of the Obama era, and are not ready for the post-Obama world, is a sign of the transition from the content freedom which was embraced for the last decade to an era of content responsibility to protect ourselves from psyops and abuse.