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by largbae 737 days ago
There is absolutely a middle ground: have multiple choices of user-selectable filters on open platforms.

Subreddits are the closest thing to an implementation of what I want today. Let me go to moderated subsets of the content on a platform without taking away my right to expand my view at any time I wish.

Twitter et al allow you to do some moderation with blocking and follows. But opaque recommendation engines and new accounts present challenges for both.

1 comments

I'm not sure if giving users control over what they consume would be a solution. If social media apps have proven anything is that the vast majority of people prefer the mind numbing experience of highly curated content, with infinite scrolling and a minimal amount of knobs and tweaks.

Users who want to curate their experience are outliers, and are probably less likely to be susceptible to misinformation to begin with.

I think the solution starts with strict moderation on behalf of companies hosting the content, accompanied by strict regulation of tech companies by governments. Along the way, passing regulation to adopt programs and initiatives that educate people about technology and critical thinking from a very early age will provide new generations with crucial skills to combat disinformation, which could hopefully eventually spread to areas of government and industry to further propel us in the right direction.

Tech approaches alone aren't the solution, and we need major social and political long-term changes as well. But strict moderation and regulation needs to happen as a start to stop the bleeding.

I think we are roughly in agreement here. Even a "default filter" can be ok as long as it can be _turned off_ by the user.

The problem with deplatforming and censorship is that even the savviest users are unable to discuss what they have no way to ever see.