| ▲ | pjc50 4 hours ago |
| > "Political content is pushing users toward the exit" The culture war is exhausting. The idealist dream of some sort of Athenian public deliberation has been overwritten by ragebait. It's both very effective at meeting social media goals (getting people to spend too much time online arguing with strangers), and political goals (Project 2025; the Hungarian/Russian/American conserviative project CPAC; whatever it is that Musk is doing with X; Cambridge Analytica; and so on). |
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| ▲ | nottorp 4 hours ago | parent [-] |
| My facebook seems to have trained itself to never give me "political content". Still, I open it about once per week to check for events at my favorite saturday evening hang outs, look at some cat photos and close it. |
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| ▲ | assimpleaspossi 3 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | I never had a Facebook account till about 10 years ago when I went to a funeral and found out about relatives who had one and encouraged me to join them there. I did but, today, they might post there three or four times a year to show vacation pictures and that's it. I, too, only look at it once every week or two in case there's an event that happened but that's maybe once a year. | |
| ▲ | nirav72 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | It takes some effort, but you can get the recommendation algo to clean up your feed. My youtube account of 15 years was flooded with political content. Mainly just opinion stuff and lot of AI slop. So I just unsubbed all channels and started clicking the don't recommend this channel or I don't like this content. It took couple of months, but my recommended videos are back to what I liked watching. Mainly dev and hobby stuff. For channels that I do like that are non-political, I just keep bookmarked links that go directly to their channel page. |
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