Conversation

I wonder if it is a mistake to analyze social media platform policies in terms of political partisanship or relations with power. It's more like there's an identity to the UX (middle class) and things that confuse optics/aesthetics of UX normalcy get filtered out.
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When ExxonMobil, BP or Chevron runs an ad promoting its "environmental stewardship," Twitter does not consider it political. But when a climate group tries to run an ad to respond to that narrative, it's banned because climate change is "political." @jack, what gives?
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Version of Hanlon's razor: never attribute to conscious politics what can be adequately explained by normalcy maintenance
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The core problem is that social media is a 10^9 scale policy machine with a 10^2 emotional interface. Sure you "know" there are two billion people here, but it feels like just you and Dunbar's Number of your closest friends. When the mask slips, it's a shock.