See you've done all this workaround, fighting with what some designer did because they assumed all the users are imbeciles.
The problem shouldn't exist. The object should do what we instruct, and not have its own opinions of us and do stuff on our behalf presuming incompetency
Let's take another example, the 4chan-ification of the web making everything ephemeral. All the feed based sites basically hide what you just saw forever. They've fundamentally broken the web and made all content disposable.
It's no longer an addressable public record. It breaks the fundamental storage and organization principles of why computers exist and the fundamental purposes of why they're networked together, as a shared communal record.
Seeing this working well goes back to original online spaces like this in the 1970s https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Community_Memory
Or my favorite quote about this
> It was like an interactive bulletin board. This wasn’t a machine behind
a locked door calling shots, quantifying your inadequacies…
No! You could touch it. It was a radical reversal. We all knew who the
computer was. But, this time, it had no idea who we were.”
“Sounds like chaos!” Thomas responds.
> “No! It was anything but!” Orion snaps back protectively, “I could sit at
the keyboard and it would say”hello human”. A black woman could sit
down and it would say “hello human”. Henry Kissinger could. It would
say “hello human” and not for any redemption on his part.
> It’s because the computer was taught how to help but nobody had fed it
Instruction on how to hate.
It was then I first saw the computer as a place. A place of hope: an
apotheosis of everything I fight for and every thing I want the world
to be.”
Instead we've broken this and made things aggressively caustic to the human spirit and it shows. Social media is a poison because it's designed poisonously.
This is a deep and systemic problem. You didn't have to see it
It's there but you don't have to see it