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Threads is Trading Trust For Growth (werd.io) 37

Ben Werdmuller, an entrepreneur who leads tech for ProPublica, writes on the trust crisis brewing in Meta's Threads app. He posted a quick comment about the Internet Archive's legal troubles, only to find it blew up in unexpected ways. Turns out, Threads' algorithm tossed his post to folks way outside his usual crowd, and they weren't happy about the lack of context. He writes: The comments that really surprised me were the ones that accused me of engagement farming. I've never received these before, and it made me wonder about the underlying assumptions. Why would this be engagement farming? Why would someone do this? Why would they assume that about me? Turns out, Meta's been secretly paying select "creators" up to $5,000 per viral post, turning the platform into a digital gold rush. Now, every post is suspect.
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Threads is Trading Trust For Growth

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  • Trust? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Baron_Yam ( 643147 ) on Friday September 06, 2024 @07:52AM (#64767646)

    Who the hell is left on the planet dumb enough to trust anything from the Facebook crew?

    • No shit. What fucking idiot trusts any social media.

    • Apparently, a great many people. "This is a sucker born every minute" is out of date with modern population growth. It probably ought to be there is a sucker born every second.
    • Probably the same people who still use Wells Fargo.

    • Who the hell is left on the planet dumb enough to trust anything from people on the internet?

      FTFY. This isn't a Facebook crew problem. It's an everywhere problem. The internet is just jammed full of untrustworthy rubbish on literally every platform. Yeah even on Slashdot when you browse at exactly the wrong moment you find the occasional idiots or Putin lackies with mod points just turn the comments section into garbage.

      People are the worst, period.

  • Turns out, Meta's been secretly paying select "creators" up to $5,000 per viral post, turning the platform into a digital gold rush. Now, every post is suspect.

    Is anyone really surprised? Facebook and its ilk (ie. anything the Zuck has regurgitated) have been a cancer on the internet.

  • Wait a minute (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

    >He posted a quick comment about the Internet Archive's legal troubles, only to find it blew up in unexpected ways. Turns out, Threads' algorithm tossed his post to folks way outside his usual crowd, and they weren't happy about the lack of context.

    So this guy discovered that his posts are public and recommended to people based on how system's algorithm decides? Something that is literally the point of X and all of its clones and has been working like this since Twitter's modern form came about what, a d

  • Insta has better photos, Threads has better commenting and you don't have to post "See link in Bio", you can just add a link. I wanted to like Threads, but they can't get critical mass to make it interesting enough.

  • ... is that it isn't run by Elon Musk. But that doesn't mean it's not a cesspool... it's just a different cesspool.

  • Threads only does this if your posts are set to the world-readable "public setting."

    What I see is a clueless boomer who doesn't understand their own account settings, left themselves world readable, and then wrote an article complaining when people read the post they'd left out for the whole world to read.

The question of whether computers can think is just like the question of whether submarines can swim. -- Edsger W. Dijkstra

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