Tag: Twitter

  • The Socials

    With Twitter continuing to implode, it might be wise to look for other opportunities on different socials. It is incredibly hard to rebuild online communities once they migrate to other apps. With that in mind, here’s where you can currently find “me”:

    Facebook

    Blue Sky

    Mastodon

    Spoutible

    @Haligowan on Hive

    I’ll continue using Twitter for the foreseeable future. It remains useful on desktop when you have this extension running. Unfortunately, the app experience is getting worse as there’s no way to counter Musk’s destructive tweaking of the platform.

    When the majority of my mutuals pick a clear winner from the above I’ll abandon Twitter. Whether or not this happens before Musk sells it or completely grinds it into dust remains unknown. With education unions gearing up for possible strike actions in Ontario I hope this disruption won’t affect our ability to be nimble and network with each other.

  • Twitter Jail

    At the end of the last week, Twitter suspended my account for a response I sent to an intentionally transphobic reply to me. With such an explosive opening statement I wouldn’t be surprised if you thought my jailable offence was for something spicy. No doubt you are champing at the bit waiting for me to divulge all the juicy details (if your eyes haven’t already scanned below).

    Unfortunately, the infraction is a bit of a letdown. The statement that instantly resulted in a 12-hour suspension after pressing send was:

    “Go jump into a lake, little TERF”

    @haligowan , Twitter

    If you’re scratching your head at how such a statement could result in a suspension, Twitter instantly provided its reasoning:

    Specifically for: Violating our rules against promoting or encouraging suicide or self-harm. You may not promote or encourage suicide or self-harm. When we receive reports that a person is threatening suicide or self-harm, we may take a number of steps to assist them, such as reaching out to that person and providing resources such as contact information for our mental health partners.

    Twitter

    It happened instantly after sending the tweet so I could only guess that it was an automatic action taken by the system, and that someone decided to code “go jump into a lake” as “self-harm”. I am not sure what dictionary they were using for that judgement call but it’s not one I’ve read.

    I was bemused to be suspended for something so innocuous when my mentions are frequently clogged with Nazi imagery, libelous accusations, queer and transphobic comments, genocide denial, and the occasional death threat. Not once have I ever received a notification that a violent reply sent to me violated Twitter’s TOS. I’ve reported so many tweets over the years, and no matter how blatant the bigotry, they almost always escape suspension. This includes accounts whose handles are antisemitic or include a profile picture that is literal blackface.

    The civility trap seems to apply to people on the receiving end of abuse and not enforced for the bucketload of obviously fake accounts doling out violent bigotry. All you need to do is search Twitter for my handle and a few choice slurs to see your results quickly fill up.

    News that Twitter is worth half of what Musk paid shouldn’t come as a surprise.

  • What’s in the News?

    At some point, over a decade ago, social media became my chief news outlet. Twitter was great for this as I would see stories pushed onto my feed I wouldn’t have otherwise seen. Alas, all good things must come to an end and Twitter is definitely coming to some sort of tumultuous end.

    The guy who bought it regularly boosts violent people and engages in horrible behaviour in some kind of bid to remain relevant. People who were kicked off the platform are now being welcomed back so they can freely engage in the atrocities that got them kicked off in the first place.

    I’ve seen a lot of the accounts I follow openly question how much longer they can remain on a compromised platform. Each social media enclave has its unique atmosphere, and the allure of Twitter meant it brought in many people under a social justice umbrella. Being able to microblog quick snippets to a wider audience was a fast way to get pertinent information out.

    My first foray was to surround myself with other creatives at the time and treat it like an alternative Facebook. Eventually, I was drawn to the public commons aspect of the site. The Idle No More movement played a large part in this as I was able to get information from within the movement without the lens of established media washing away all nuances. Finding and following activists on the ground in Ferguson, and seeing real time abuses on Wet’suwet’en land by the RCMP

    Conspiracy theorists always existed on the website, as well as racists, misogynists, homophobes, and every other sort of deplorable. Nascent hate movements like Gamergate and Comicsgate preyed on impressionable, often male, users and were an introduction of sorts to what we see all over the platform in 2023. They laid the groundwork for the massive swell of swarming by hate influencers. The bleating of “actually it’s about ethics in gaming journalism” ran as hollow then as “actually it’s about protecting kids from grooming” does today.

    At this point there doesn’t seem to be a viable alternative to Twitter, which is why many of us continue to stick around, despite the abuse. The constant firing of important company staff members seems to contribute to an untold number of glitches. I still use it to get important community updates I would otherwise miss if I only followed traditional news sources. However, the sense of “community” is quickly dissipating (my big conspiracy theory is that it’s intentional due to who bought it). Replies from friends don’t always show up as a notification, even though abusive replies will pop up without delay. Friends and many of the people I follow take frequent breaks from the app, for their mental health, as they experience nonstop abusive harassment and swarmings.

    There was a push to get people on Mastadon and that fizzled. TikTok is fairly labour intensive by comparison. Instagram, being owned by Meta, has many of Facebook’s problems (being awash with ads and finding it difficult to see your friends’ posts in order). Maybe we need to bring back RSS feeds, cut out the “micro” part of micro-blogging and have everyone go back to using blogs. At least then we would limit Twitter-style pile ons and produce content that benefits us, rather than providing advertisement space for an immature billionaire.