Is anyone here so hardcore that they don’t even bother with mainstream social media? If its not on Lemmy or Mastodon it must not be important? Anyone that hardcore?

  • SwingingTheLamp@midwest.social
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    24
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    1 day ago

    Who set those rules? Is there standards body that promulgates them? I remember that social media emerged as a term to describe media on which the users provided the content, rather than traditional gatekeepers like newspapers and TV networks. Wikipedia agrees, using special jargon, distinguishing between monologic and dialogic media models.

    Reddit is quintessential social media.

    • tyler@programming.dev
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      50 minutes ago

      Social media emerged as a term to describe Facebook and MySpace, places where you added connections between friends and shared moments of your life with them, not a comment section on a website. Using the term “social media” to describe something that existed before those sites existed devalues the actual worth of forums as a meeting place. There is clearly a difference between something like Twitter and Facebook who’s only purpose is to show you ads and things to get you angry using algorithms and places like Lemmy and really any sort of comment section (Reddit and 4chan included) that are simply people talking to each other.

      I would expect most people here would be able to understand the difference and how referring to things that are distinctly not Facebook or Twitter as being in the same category. Reddit, Lemmy, your random double edge razor forum, etc are not social media. They’re forums. They’ve existed for thousands of years.

      forum
      noun
      fo·​rum ˈfȯr-əm 
      plural forums also fora ˈfȯr-ə 
      Synonyms of forum
      1
      a
      : the marketplace or public place of an ancient Roman city forming the center of judicial and public business
      b
      : a public meeting place for open discussion
      The club provides a forum for people interested in local history.
      c
      : a medium (such as a newspaper or online service) of open discussion or expression of ideas
      2
      : a judicial body or assembly : COURT
      3
      a
      : a public meeting or lecture involving audience discussion
      The town has scheduled a public forum to discuss the proposal.
      b
      : a program (as on radio or television) involving discussion of a problem usually by several authorities