and fuck the UK goverment

  • GaMEChld@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    3 days ago

    I still kinda feel like every one of those examples was success based on accessibility and ease of use. Connectivity issues? Inaccessible. Facebook was cleaner and more user friendly. I never had a MySpace because it just seemed more daunting to me for whatever reason. Facebook seemed cleaner and standardized in ways, so to me, it felt more accessible.

    Steam and Newell comes to mind, about how piracy is an accessibility and distribution problem.

    And no, I didn’t mean to invalidate your stance because you didn’t develop something, more that I too am not a developer so I couldn’t speak to your point about how easy it would be to have Reddit be Usenet based and still have the same level of proliferation. My apologies for being unclear.

    • enthusiasm_headquarters@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      2 days ago

      How about instead of reddit being the example, we use craigslist? A mostly innocuous non-profit with wide usage, founded by a person who could have easily “gone reddit.” It isn’t so hard to imagine the same ethos and technology being applied to fundamental “social protocols” like reddit, facebook and others. My objection is that there seems to be an assumption (in American culture at least) that the way things are are the only way they could have turned out or the end result of making the best thing.

      A widely cited example: Microsoft did not make the best operating system. There’s many reasons why they too over the world.

      A lot depends on what one considers the best, too. Your points about the examples I gave are valid, we just had very different experiences of those platforms.