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by ImPostingOnHN
1478 days ago
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I think what you're being told is that your personal dismissal of Facebook as useful for isolated caregivers (like such disingenuously reductive language as calling an entire community around, say, cancer, or sobriety, a "group chat") is more reflective of your own personal preferences, rather than any actual evidence being provided to you by the people being affected. indeed, it's easy to dismiss a use case that you don't personally have, given a sufficient lack of empathy >It's also fascinating to hear the words people use when FB has become so deeply ingrained in a culture's social fabric. yep, fascinating and true. we'll have to come up with a good alternative if we want that to change |
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My wife went through a difficult personal journey around the time of the birth of our second child, when she decided to leave all social media. She decided that the benefits of this, which include a mind not addicted to the endless drip of social media, and also giving our kids a chance to live distraction-free, outweighed the disadvantages. Yes, giving up social media when your personal time is already incredibly disjointed and isolated is difficult - Facebook does provide some (at least in my wife's opinion) superficial and temporary benefits there.
>we'll have to come up with a good alternative if we want that to change
What was wrong with what we had before? That is, cohesive, in-person communities. Finding a FOSS alternative to Facebook, etc, as the solution to society's ills is, IMHO, missing the point.