The challenge for Twitter: IRL, these use-cases have established social conventions. For example: if you're about to attend a local meetup, you probably already have an idea of what's expected, and how to behave. But here, the norms aren't clear, and use-cases often collide.
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Twitter has been called "the cocktail party of the Internet" But we say stuff here that we'd never say if we were in the same space: "I hate the new design of X; it's awful" We express views like this freely online, but it would be rude if the designer was with us in the room.
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On Twitter, we're also navigating relationship boundaries. I've met incredible people here, many of whom I "tweet" with regularly. But... how do we define our relationship? Are we friends? What's the threshold? What expectations should we have for each other?
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Twitter also creates "para-social relationships." These are one-sided relationships that make us feel like we know somebody, because we follow them online. It can feel like we have a friendship with them, even though they don't know who we are.
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Our para-social relationships on Twitter can make us feel like we can say something personal to someone we follow, even though there's no real relationship there. It might be OK to ask a friend: "You doing ok? You look tired." But writing that comment on YouTube? Not OK.
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Not all boundaries are good, and society is always evolving. But having a common understanding of what's appropriate, and what's not, in a variety of contexts is helpful. An acute example: "You can take off your pants in your house, but you shouldn't if you're on Zoom."
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The beauty of online spaces is that we can interact with, and seek to understand, an incredible diversity of people from all around the world. But too often, all that diversity is hidden behind an 140px avatar. We don't truly *see* each other.
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I know some people reading this are going through a really tough time. Others have been up all night with their newborn baby. Someone may have just lost a parent to COVID. In-person, I might be able to perceive that you're struggling. But online, you're just a smiling avatar.
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The way you navigate public spaces often depends on how insulated you are from others. If you're feeling upset, but you're in your car, you might yell and swear at other drivers. But you wouldn't do that if you were on the sidewalk. The car insulates you; makes you feel safe.
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The way you navigate public spaces also depends on how *safe* you feel. If your experience of Twitter is a barrage of toxic DMs, sexual comments, etc. then you'll act (and react) on Twitter differently than someone who gets very little negative attention.
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"On the Internet, nobody knows you're a dog," and on Twitter, you don't really know much about the people you're interacting with. What kind of unsolicited DMs do they get? What's going on in their life right now? What's happening in their country? What's their true intent?
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W odpowiedzi do @mijustin
My IRL interactions are pretty much exclusively respectful and friendly. I’m guessing my size/sex plays a role there. On Twitter and GitHub people are a lot quicker to throw out insults or demand me to do work for free.
0 odpowiedzi 0 podanych dalej 0 polubionychDziękujemy. Twitter skorzysta z tych informacji, aby Twoja oś czasu bardziej Ci odpowiadała. CofnijCofnij
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Wydaje się, że ładowanie zajmuje dużo czasu.
Twitter jest przeciążony lub wystąpił chwilowy problem. Spróbuj ponownie lub sprawdź status Twittera, aby uzyskać więcej informacji.
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