I mean, yes obviously. The world needs Cozy Ghostbusters.
GayDeceiver (@GayDeceiver@mstdn.social)
Hear me out: Antiques Roadshow, but for cursed objects. #AntiquesRoadShowCursedObjects
Mastodon 🐘 (mstdn.social)
I mean, yes obviously. The world needs Cozy Ghostbusters.
Hear me out: Antiques Roadshow, but for cursed objects. #AntiquesRoadShowCursedObjects
Mastodon 🐘 (mstdn.social)
@flyingsquirrel @evan Possibly worse: I've got almost 6k followers on here, because I guess I bring some funny now and then.
But if I have a vulnerable friend On Here, who maybe feels safe with a small number of curated mutuals and posts something friends only, and my reply brings _six thousand randos_ into the mix? Then I ... can't be that person's friend anymore; not on here at least, not responsibly. I can't talk to them at all.
@flyingsquirrel @evan I think this is a fair assessment. If the default setting - particularly for somebody with a large number of followers - is that a reply causes a friends-only post to immediately break containment, that makes any reply from anyone who does numbers on here an act of bad faith, intended or not.
@evan In that context, I would expect that the venn overlap I'm describing would be quite large, but it certainly seems like something we could actually measure and experiment with if it were presented as an option.
@evan I think the default presumption that everyone is welcome to become part of any conversation is only that: an unconsidered default assumption inherited from Twitter and specifically from early Twitter's growth-at-any-cost corporate goals. At the very least we should be considering counterbalancing options.
@evan Absolutely. People can still seek out threads of conversation, but the set of people automatically tagged in get narrowed quickly.
@evan The venn intersection of Alice and Bob's followers.