Cycle path
London, May 2024
Quote of the Day
”In my next life I want to live backwards. Start out dead and finish off as an orgasm.”
- Woody Allen
Musical alternative to the morning’s radio news
Vaughan Williams | The Lark Ascending
I’ve always loved this piece. Just scanning through the comments below the YouTube recording I came on this:
The first time I heard this exquisite piece of music, I was driving a lorry through the Berkshire countryside and it came on Classic FM, and it was requested by a mother who had just buried her four year old son. They used to listen to it together through his illness and he loved it… she said it was now how she imagined him, a beautiful free spirit flying up to heaven. Despite being a big burly trucker, I had to pull over and I sobbed my heart out for ten minutes. I just couldn’t hold it together. Even recounting the story now, sets me off! How can a world that produces such beautiful music be so cruel to such an innocent! Needless to say I have had a soft spot for this piece of music ever since. I can’t listen to it without thinking of that poor bereaved mother and the poor poor child!
Music reaches parts of us that nothing else can touch.
Long Read of the Day
The Great Social Media Diaspora
If you want to understand what has happened to the public sphere of our democracies, then this long, long essay by Renée Diresta is a good place to start. (Busyness alert: you need to give it time.) It’s the best exposition I know of how digital technology — and social media in particular — has irretrievably fragmented the public sphere. And it’s also a sobering explanation of why users fleeing from a particular platform they have come to detest to join another, apparently nicer, platform doesn’t solve the underlying problem of discourse fragmentation. Democracies no longer have any meaningful collective public opinion. They have innumerable publics, each with their own opinions. The social construction of ‘public opinion’ by Gallup — the first polling organisation — in 1935 no longer applies.
For the past two decades, most online discourse has occurred on a handful of social media platforms. Their dominion seemed unshakeable. The question wasn’t when a challenger to Twitter or Facebook might arrive but if one could ever do so successfully. Could a killer new app, or perhaps the cudgel of antitrust, make a difference?
Today, those same platforms still enjoy the largest user bases; massive breakout successes like TikTok are the rare exception, not the rule. However, user exodus to smaller platforms has become increasingly common — especially from X, the once-undisputed home of The Discourse. X refugees have scattered and settled again and again: to Gab and Truth Social, to Mastodon and Bluesky.
What ultimately splintered social media wasn’t a killer app or the Federal Trade Commission — it was content moderation. Partisan users clashed with “referees” tasked with defining and enforcing rules like no hate speech, or making calls about how to handle Covid-19 content. Principles like “freedom of speech, not freedom of reach” — which proposed that “borderline” content (posts that fell into grey areas around hate speech, for example) remain visible but unamplified — attempted to articulate a middle ground. However, even nuanced efforts were reframed as unreasonable suppression by ideologues who recognized the power of dominating online discourse. Efforts to moderate became flashpoints, fueling a feedback loop where online norms fed offline polarization — and vice versa.
And so, in successive waves, users departed for alternatives: platforms where the referees were lax (Truth Social), nearly nonexistent (Telegram) or self-appointed (Mastodon). Much of this fracturing occurred along political lines. Today the Great Decentralization is accelerating, with newspapers of record, Luke Skywalker and others as the latest high-profile refugees to lead fresh retreats…
If you’re pressed for time, Nathan Garedels’s essay, “How Disinformation Deforms Democracy” provides an overview of Diresta’s argument.
Books, etc.
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Screenshot
Just arrived!
Linkblog
Something I noticed, while drinking from the Internet firehose.
From Kevin Kelly’s 50 years of travel tips:
Here in brief is the method I’ve honed to optimize a two-week vacation: When you arrive in a new country, immediately proceed to the farthest, most remote, most distant place you intend to reach during the trip. If there is a small village, remote spa, a friend’s farm, or a wild place you plan on seeing on the trip, go there immediately. Do not stop near the airport. Do not rest overnight in the arrival city. Do not pause to acclimate. If at all possible proceed by plane, bus, jeep, car directly to the furthest point without interruption. Make it an overnight journey if you have to. Then once you reach your furthest point, unpack, explore, and work your way slowly back to the big city, wherever your international departure airport is.
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