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This Slack discussion by , Linh, David, Dane and Austin occurred in hackernoon's official channel.
RE: "social networks are a bottleneck": I definitely think that having full control over who can see your content (whether that be just your mom, or the entire world) and full control over what content you see (for instance, opting into seeing ALL content by David Smooke, and no content from Random Guy You Don’t Like) will become the norm.
Social media platforms obviously use algorithms to show you stuff that lightly outrages/addicts you, and it’s hard to overcome the algorithm and fine-tune what you see. With the way most platforms are designed (outside of texting, and things like Google Docs/Notion), it’s also incredibly hard to fine-tune who gets to see your content (and I'm not even talking about tracking/spying. Just humans, reading things online). I think this control issue will be fixed.
I envision a platform(s) where everyone gets full control.
Anna, I think smaller groups are a great way to avoid abuse. The big challenge with small groups, things are often too silo'ed. I'd like to see a highly specialized small groups social network where people freely flow in and out of groups.
I don't think a chatroom-like environment works well though. Maybe a more open verison of Slack could work.
Here are some other random things on my mind about democratizing publishing:
MONETIZATION / PAYWALLS:
Thoughts on paywalls?
I think the discussion around paywalls interesting, as far as democratizing the “viewing” part of publishing. Obviously, creators should be able to monetize if they want—and platforms should be able to be financially sustainable. But not everyone has $5-100/month to pay for content. In the future, I imagine some sort of “pay what you can” sliding scale model could be interesting (or a “pay for someone else’s subscription”, like what happens in coffee lines), or a subscription model that’s on the creator side (share unlimited things, use premium templates, have a better dashboard, etc.). It’s obviously still not perfectly “democratized”. But the idea that students or folks trying to save money can’t afford to read lots of great long-form articles bothers me. What do you think is the best way to monetize content?
BETTER-DESIGNED, MORE FLEXIBLE TOOLS:
It should be incredibly easy to publish things in a custom format. One of the great things about Instagram it’s that it’s so easy my grandpa can use it, but unfortunately when it comes to longer-form, text-based content, people end up writing it on the Notes app and screencapping it, and posting it as swipe-able squares. There should be something with the ease of Instagram, but it enables you to share more thoughtful, longer-form, flexible-format content. What are some things that bother you about the "physical" barriers to publishing custom content?
David, vetting is definitely one way to approach the problem. Linh did just bring up one major problem with a private network though. Exclusive access means you are excluding a lot of important voices from the conversation.
But overall I'm mixed on vetting because while it isn't an ideal solution, I'm not sure if there is a better way to avoid abuse at this stage.
Lihn, that's a little bit of a pessimistic view
I don't think all roads lead to a dystopian future.
build back better
I have a lot more on my mind about content moderation and who gets to be the police--but real quick, my investors will kill me if I don't give a shoutout to the platform I'm building.
It's called Talium, and it's the fastest way to publish web pages.
nice! (the pages y'all have built). I started building Talium because no other writing platform was hitting the spot for me. I wanted something with the accessibility (and browser-based functionality) of Google Docs, but the sophisticated design quality of Weblow or Medium--with the ability to choose who sees what you wrote. I decided to build my own platform.
Talium is optimized for publishing one-pagers that are simple, sleek, and beautiful. So far, people have used it for things like job posts, event detail pages, class syllabi, business proposals, and even sharing poems.