Heyyy!!! You just spend a lot of time researching and reflecting on your user experience to write this so long and detailed post. That’s crazy! I appreciated it so much since I was the person who fall in love with Threads a while ago. At that time, Threads is like a daily diary to me, cute and helpful posts are all over the place, which makes me very healing. Unfortunately, I’m feeling like I don’t want to use Threads anymore these days with the reason exactly like you mentioned above. Well, it’s kinda sad to know that your favorite app one is not like your expectation anymore, but I really grateful for finding this post instead to strengthen my decision one more time. Thank you for your writing so much, keep it up 😉
Personally, besides cancel culture, Threads also perpetuates positive ideas e.g. culture (nostalgia for traditional values), and patriotism (to some extent :D). But its algorithm seems to favor negativity over positivity, even more extreme than Facebook :<
P.S. Actually, I find replying to comments on Threads racks my brain more than on Facebook, esp. for controversial threads, because I know that my response will be scrutinized. I'll try my best to present my arguments within the word limit, so sometimes it's a quest of concision =)))
Yeah, ironically, it's patriotism turning into extreme nationalism that inspired me to write this post, not cancel culture.
Negativity seems to be more favoured than positivity because when you see a post that you don't agree with, your brain goes, "I must comment to tell this person how dumb their opinions are"; posts that you agree with don't trigger this action. Thus, posts that make you feel highly arousal emotions, like angry or anxious, are those that tend to get more comments, and therefore, more favoured by the algorithm. I might have read some research on this and will include those later (please ping me if I forget lol).
mình nghĩ là nó xuất phát từ các group bà mẹ bỉm sữa trên facebook rồi mn thấy vui nên gọi nhau vậy thôi :)))))))) nó cũng có thời của nó, như là hồi trước mọi người hay gọi là chế, bác, hay là bảnh ấy
Heyyy!!! You just spend a lot of time researching and reflecting on your user experience to write this so long and detailed post. That’s crazy! I appreciated it so much since I was the person who fall in love with Threads a while ago. At that time, Threads is like a daily diary to me, cute and helpful posts are all over the place, which makes me very healing. Unfortunately, I’m feeling like I don’t want to use Threads anymore these days with the reason exactly like you mentioned above. Well, it’s kinda sad to know that your favorite app one is not like your expectation anymore, but I really grateful for finding this post instead to strengthen my decision one more time. Thank you for your writing so much, keep it up 😉
Thank you for reading this post and sharing your story Khue
Giải pháp: hãy qua Substack - thế giới bình yên hơn ở đây :>>
Personally, besides cancel culture, Threads also perpetuates positive ideas e.g. culture (nostalgia for traditional values), and patriotism (to some extent :D). But its algorithm seems to favor negativity over positivity, even more extreme than Facebook :<
P.S. Actually, I find replying to comments on Threads racks my brain more than on Facebook, esp. for controversial threads, because I know that my response will be scrutinized. I'll try my best to present my arguments within the word limit, so sometimes it's a quest of concision =)))
Yeah, ironically, it's patriotism turning into extreme nationalism that inspired me to write this post, not cancel culture.
Negativity seems to be more favoured than positivity because when you see a post that you don't agree with, your brain goes, "I must comment to tell this person how dumb their opinions are"; posts that you agree with don't trigger this action. Thus, posts that make you feel highly arousal emotions, like angry or anxious, are those that tend to get more comments, and therefore, more favoured by the algorithm. I might have read some research on this and will include those later (please ping me if I forget lol).
Chỉ muốn hỏi là tại sao trên threads chúng nó hỏi lắm vl
:)))))) anh cũng không biết
“Are we losing our ability to engage in genuine dialogue, think critically, and appreciate depth in an increasingly superficial digital age?”
Sometimes the cmt sections on threads make me feel like they didnt have that ability in the first place, let alone losing it
Nếu mình tạo một tài khoản mới hoàn toàn ở Twitter, thuật toán của họ đưa những tin giật gân, bạo lực băng đảng, bạo lực gia đình, scandal của ai đó.
Còn khi mình dùng Threads, thì thuật toán của họ đưa ra những bài mà mình đọc qua thì chỉ nghĩ đến 1 câu hỏi "Cái này có thật ko?"
em khá thắc mắc sao ở trên threads mng toàn gọi nhau là mom vậy i thought all young adults nowadays don't wanna kids?
mình nghĩ là nó xuất phát từ các group bà mẹ bỉm sữa trên facebook rồi mn thấy vui nên gọi nhau vậy thôi :)))))))) nó cũng có thời của nó, như là hồi trước mọi người hay gọi là chế, bác, hay là bảnh ấy