On the Well Astonishing Verdicts on Social Media
Published on JanĀ 21, 2024, filed under misc (feed). (Share this on Mastodon orĀ Bluesky?)
We may speak anything from 470,000,000 to 860,000,000 words in our lifetime.
Although these estimates donāt include written words, letās assume they are covered by these numbers.
Letās then use Twitter/X for a representative social media platform, and an average of 6 words per tweet (and, therefore, social media message).Ā *
And letās say that any given person may block or ācancelā another person for a single message (i.e., for 6 words).
That would mean that itās possible that 1.277 Ć 10ā8 or 0.000001277% of what anyone everāeverāsays or writes can get them blocked or canceled. For something done in a similarly miniscule fraction of their lifetime.
Now, this isnāt an argument not to block or cancel. Itās just to say that the scale isāastonishing.Ā ā
If youāre interested, Iāve commented on the public discourse in other places, as in Reasons to Listen to Whom You Donāt Agree With, The Reverse A-Hole Rule of Social Media and Why Online Communication Is So Not-Great. But these are my personal views, and Iāve put together a whole book about how easy it is to find fault in everything.
* This 6-words number came up before the end of Twitterās 140-characters time, however later data suggests that little changed, with a similarly low count of characters and words used. Even if word count had doubled in relation to Twitterās changing of tweet length, the point made in this post would still hold, so I didnāt scrape more data.
ā Well, one could also argue that weāre not good with numbers. Thatās at least my take, having learned how we may even miss how much 1,000 is.
About Me
Iām Jens (long: Jens Oliver Meiert), and Iām a web developer, manager, and author. Iāve been working as a technical lead and engineering manager for companies youāve never heard of and companies you use every day, Iām an occasional contributor to web standards (like HTML, CSS, WCAG), and I write and review books for OāReilly and Frontend Dogma.
I love trying things, not only in web development and engineering management, but also in other areas like philosophy. Here on meiert.com I share some of my experiences and views. (I value you being critical, interpreting charitably, and giving feedback.)