1/ This exposes a problem for both traditional media and social media: bad coordination. Traditional media has structure. Absent coordination, this structure synchronizes and homogenizes coverage in a way that tends to induce bad allocations.https://twitter.com/generativist/status/1060657541191950336 …
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4/ I don't know how to solve that problem. But, the same problem exists in social media, an even more bottom-up way. Trending topics -- both algorithmic ones and purely perceptual ones -- induce a desire for self-expression on that topic. It's the same bad allocation problem.
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5/ This problem doesn't have a social solution. Tweeting that it is bad to tweet about something doesn't even inhibit it. "Don't think about the pink elephant" in another form. It still hooks into the whole viral attention mechanism.
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6/ On social media, the poor allocation of attention *is* a technical problem. But, other than chronological timelines -- which only partially mediates the negative effects --
@Twitter hasn't expressed any desire to fix the problem -- because, essentially, it's their product.Show this thread
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