Crissa
Well-known member
- First Name
- Crissa
- Joined
- Jul 8, 2020
- Threads
- 82
- Messages
- 11,802
- Reaction score
- 3,841
- Location
- Santa Cruz
- Vehicles
- 2014 Zero S, 2013 Mazda 3
This is called 'muddying the water'.It’s actually pretty easy for users to curate their social media, just like their personal life. My Twitter is pretty limited. I follow Elon, a few information sources i like, my favourite hockey team. My feed is a peaceful place where the world agrees with me and I tend to check it only at the end of the day to put me in a happy place before bed. The only way I would encounter people or opinions that bother me is if I seek them out. I don’t, not on Twitter.
When it comes to scam, steal or abuse we have to be careful. Social media isn’t a court of law. A “scam” can be hard to define. My Facebook was plagued with MLM marketing a while back. No, I don’t need Monet, my hair is fine. Is it a scam? To me it is, it’s a pyramid scheme. But not to others. I don’t think Facebook should give them the boot, but again I had the option of blocking them if I want. If something is outright theft, it should be turned over to the police. With abuse, again you can block abusers. If someone is going beyond “simple” abuse and, for example, sending penis pics to random women, this should be the area of law enforcement. Just like if they were sending them in the mail. There are laws against sexual harassment and exposure. Countries have been passing dick pic laws. It shouldn’t be social media’s job to police- they should get jail time.
I’ve seen enough of social media companies trying to be moral and legal judges. Heck, real judges have a hard enough time getting it right. My wife - immune compromised and triple vaxed at the time- shared a post on Facebook asking other women about the effects of Pfizer on her periods. (It’s a real, known issue that should be discussed). It was flagged as misinformation and replaced with a picture of a unicorn shitting rainbows. I wouldn’t believe the unicorn thing if I hadn’t seen it myself. If a FB employee can be that stupid and immature, I would put no limits on their willingness to shape narratives and politics.
It's the opposite of a slippery slope argument, where you roll out obviously worse things. But instead, you become apologetic for the worst things by showing these just vaguely annoying things.
It's very dishonest, and disrespectful of those who have been piled on, stalked, swatted, or just victims of crime or deadly advice.
This is no intended insult: It's easy for you to curate because you are not a woman, minority, or target for your job or position. You don't have a disability, and are well enough informed and educated to avoid the obvious scams. And you have the time to waste here.
But that doesn't work when you want to involve more than a few people. The reason there are so few women here is not because women innately dislike trucks. The reason there are fewer minorities here isn't because they dislike trucks.
-Crissa
PS, I do moderate on other sites. I have been online for thirty years. Literally. And last week, I had to deal with the owner of one site being SWATed and the forum attacked by trolls because he acted to deny Russia access to a base disk access tool he curated. No, the forum I was moderating was just a motorcyclist one, but the trolls didn't care and attempted to damage it because it was his. We lost users from the constant spam and attacks. How do you tell a non-malicious new user from a malicious one? Well, when they begin spamming or being malicious. And I had to ban them, each one.
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