Pluralistic: Enshittification isn't caused by venture capital (20 Jan 2025)


Today's links

Continue reading "Pluralistic: Enshittification isn't caused by venture capital (20 Jan 2025)"

Pluralistic: Social media needs (dumpster) fire exits (14 Dec 2024)


Today's links

Continue reading "Pluralistic: Social media needs (dumpster) fire exits (14 Dec 2024)"

Pluralistic: Bluesky and enshittification (02 Nov 2024)


Today's links

Continue reading "Pluralistic: Bluesky and enshittification (02 Nov 2024)"

Pluralistic: Pinkdrunk Linkdump (18 Nov 2023)


Today's links

  • Pinkdrunk Linkdump: Your semi-regular weekend declaration of link bankruptcy.
  • This day in history: 2003, 2008, 2013, 2018
  • Colophon: Recent publications, upcoming/recent appearances, current writing projects, current reading

Continue reading "Pluralistic: Pinkdrunk Linkdump (18 Nov 2023)"

Fool Me Twice We Don’t Get Fooled Again

There’s a crucial difference between federatable and federated.

A pair of fake screenshots, one from Threads, the other from Bluesky. The top one is from a verified account called “gwb1946” whose avatar is George W Bush’s flightsuit-clad crotch. The post reads, “There’s an old saying in Tennessee — I know it’s in Texas, probably in Tennessee — that says, fool me once, shame on — shame on you.” The second post is from an account whose handle is “Regimechange,” and whose userid is @missionaccomplished.failson. It reads “Fool me — you can’t get fooled again.”

“Are you on Bluesky?”

Friends, colleagues and strangers have emailed me to ask whether I’ve set up on the new, federatable social media incubated at Twitter and spun out, which many view as a viable Twitter successor.

“Are you on Threads?”

Continue reading "Fool Me Twice We Don’t Get Fooled Again"

Pluralistic: What the fediverse (does/n't) solve (23 Dec 2022)


Today's links

Continue reading "Pluralistic: What the fediverse (does/n't) solve (23 Dec 2022)"

Pluralistic: 12 May 2022


Today's links

Continue reading "Pluralistic: 12 May 2022"

Dead letters

Email could be the last federated internet technology — but it isn’t.

Vintage engraving of a dead letter office where postal officials struggle to decipher addressing information; captioned “Who is it for? A scene in the dead letter office experts trying to decipher an illegible address”

It feels like only yesterday that we were living through the Substack bubble, as mailing lists enjoyed a new renaissance (rebranded as “newsletters”), a tangible expression of the techlash and our collective disgust with the platforms and their attempts to enclose the internet and convert it to “five giant websites, each filled with screenshots of text from the other four.

In the abstract, mailing lists/newsletters represent the promise of a return to a Jeffersonian internet, where each of us can garden own little patch, not subject to the whims of third parties. That, after all, is the original design brief of the internet, to be an “end-to-end network” where any party can connect to any other party without needing permission from anyone else.

Continue reading "Dead letters"

Pluralistic: 12 Aug 2020


Today's links

Continue reading "Pluralistic: 12 Aug 2020"

Pluralistic: 04 Aug 2020


Today's links

Continue reading "Pluralistic: 04 Aug 2020"