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My selfish take on Twitter: the Discourse could stand to care a lot less, on the margin, about “free speech” and “bias in the algorithm” and a lot more about discovering all the amazing ways a public water cooler could be improved for more joy, more discovery, more connection etc
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Twitter radically improved the quality of the creative and intellectual conversations in my life—not online, but in person. I have more and better ideas! I feel a much greater sense of belonging! It's amazing. What happens if you pivot Twitter along this axis?
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But also: there are many interesting axes to pivot around! e.g. Twitter is part of my thinking workflow. WIP ideas go out; reactions come back; my ideas are refined—elsewhere, off Twitter, through awkward workflows. What happens if you take Twitter seriously for creative work?
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Probably part of a good story here would involve creating an ecosystem of lots of weird third-party Twitter, as in the early days. But novel user interfaces are a public good, so I worry this only goes so far.
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Another way to put this: if Twitter (as it exists today) is the town square, what might it mean to build a public library for that "town"? A coffee house? A dance hall? A university campus?
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I'm reminded of this concluding bit from another essay "In a decade today's social graphs will look like blunt instruments, so primitive were their configurations." eugenewei.com/blog/2021/9/29
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