new terms: 'death of platforms'
The "death of platforms" refers to
the decline of major, centralized social media networks (like Facebook, X/Twitter, Instagram) due to algorithmic decay, user fatigue, and a shift from the "social graph" to content-based feeds. As these sites prioritize engagement over connection, users are migrating to smaller communities or direct messaging.
This video explains why many people are leaving social media platforms:
Key aspects of this trend include:
- Algorithmic Overload: Platforms now prioritize AI-driven, high-engagement content over posts from friends and family, leading to a loss of original purpose.
- "Enshittification": A term often used to describe the declining quality of platforms as they prioritize shareholder value over user experience.
- Shift to Smaller Communities: Users are leaving large, public platforms for smaller, niche communities or direct messaging apps like Discord, Telegram, and WhatsApp.
- AI Slop: The influx of low-quality, AI-generated content is flooding platforms, creating a "dead internet" scenario where human connection is replaced by automated content.
- Platform Fatigue: Users are growing weary of the same, recycled content and are seeking more authentic, less curated experiences.
This shift signifies a fundamental change in how we consume information and interact online, moving away from a centralized, advertising-driven model towards a more fragmented and, perhaps, more intimate, digital landscape.
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