Culture 'Expert Twitter' Only Goes So Far. Bring Back Blogs - To ensure readers get the latest, best information on Covid-19, pandemic experts need to go back to the early days of Web 2.0

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LATE LAST MONTH I did an interview with GQ about technology and the coronavirus pandemic. “This is a little bit flippant,” I told the reporter, “but in terms of closing things down for public health, one of the big boosts they could make would probably be shutting down Twitter.” I don’t fully believe this anymore. Though Twitter is still overrun with toxic anger and fear-based nonsense (now more than ever), it is also, in one crucial way, beginning to play an important role in our response to the pandemic. But it needs help.

Let’s start with what’s going right: So-called Expert Twitter seems to be rising to the occasion. Pandemics are immensely complicated, and understanding them requires knowledge from obscure technical fields, like epidemiology, genetics, virology, and immunology. Identifying smart ideas and leading experts in these niche subdisciplines is a daunting objective. Twitter is helping.

The platform’s commercial success is built on its eerily effective ability to filter through the avalanche of content generated by its 330 million users to find those gems that prove irresistible. It accomplishes this in a manner that’s largely agnostic to what the tweets actually say. The service’s timeline algorithm takes into account your relationship to the tweet’s author—not just whether you follow them, but also how often you like or retweet them—as well as the engagement the particular tweet has been generating from others. It combines these metrics to find tweets that fall into that perfect intersection of your affinities and sticky communication. In normal times, this algorithm serves to make Twitter almost destructively addictive. During the pandemic, however, when our affinities have turned toward a desperate craving for useful information, the dynamics of this algorithm now serve a crucial purpose: helping to surface otherwise hard to find niche experts.

It’s how, for example, so many now know about Trevor Bedford (@trvrb), a virologist at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Institute, who’s using computational algorithms to understand how the virus is spreading. Or Cameron Kyle-Sidell (@cameronks), an emergency room doctor in New York City who’s been leading the call for drastic changes to standard intubation protocols. Or Hendrick Streeck (@hendrikstreeck), the director of the Institute of Virology at the University of Bonn, whose pioneering field studies of a German coronavirus hot spot are radically changing our understanding of how the virus spreads. (Hint: You’re not likely to get it from the jogger passing you on the sidewalk.)

We can use Twitter’s follower count metric to quantify the astounding rate at which these previously unknown experts have exploded into prominence. In mid-February, after Bedford first began tweeting extensively about Covid-19 related genomic tracking, he had 10,000 followers. By mid-April this number had grown to 211,000, giving him roughly the same audience as longtime New York Times columnist David Brooks.

This distributed expertise triage is not just useful but also a relatively new capability. If this pandemic had struck even as recently as 10 years ago, we would have been stuck listening to whichever experts an overwhelmed media corps happened to have in their Rolodex. Today we can be significantly more informed, but this vision of an information-rich pandemic response is not flawless. Twitter was optimized for links and short musings. It’s not well suited for complex discussions or nuanced analyses. As a result, the feeds of these newly emerged pandemic experts are often a messy jumble of re-ups, unrolled threads, and screenshot excerpts of articles. We can do better.

We need to augment social platforms with a surge in capacity of the original Web 2.0 technology that these upstarts so effectively displaced: blogs. We need WordPress-style sites featuring both easy-to-update static pages and chronological posts. These sites could be hosted by institutions with some degree of public trust and a reasonable technology infrastructure, such as universities, medical centers, and think tanks. Some mild gatekeeping could be performed on the experts granted blogs by these institutions, and critically, IT support could be provided so that the experts could start publishing with minimal overhead. If possible, there would be a similar look and feel to these sites hosted at various institutions, providing the sense that they all belong to the same cohesive extended information network.

When confined to Twitter, pandemic experts mainly express themselves through 15- or 20-tweet long threads. Not only is this format cumbersome to consume, it also can’t easily be updated. To make matters worse, these threads are quickly pushed out of view by the downward pressure of the growing user timeline. A page or post on a blog, on the other hand, allows the expert to more easily write long-form content, including links to their articles and rich graphics, they can easily update as new information arises. In addition, a stable section of core articles can be maintained at the top of the site where they will be immediately visible and not pushed out of view by new content.

In this proposal, these experts wouldn’t abandon social media. On the contrary, they would continue to actively engage with these platforms to summarize their ideas and comment on events, while the platforms would continue to work their algorithmic magic to amplify the more impactful content. The big change, however, is that this short-form content can now be pointing back to their longer, more stable elaborations.

One issue with this vision is that to some degree it already exists. Some experts—especially those in academia—already have personal sites hosted by their home institutions, and accordingly some are already posting longer form content. Such sites, however, aren’t widespread, and though some (like George Mason economist Tyler Cowen’s longstanding blog) are easy to update, most tend to be static repositories of CVs and publications lists that are not easily updated. Having a consistent WordPress configuration with dedicated IT support would enable many more of these experts to easily post and update material more frequently

Another existing option, of course, is to submit articles to existing academic and commercial publications (e.g., this one). Experts should, of course, keep doing this, but traditional publishing is slow and articles cannot be later updated as new information arises. Faster and more dynamic options are important to keep pace with this rapidly evolving crisis.

Experts could also rely instead on existing general-purpose publishing platforms like Medium, but this might exacerbate concerns about misinformation. The social capital required to request a blog hosted by a reputable institution would be significant enough to filter out cranks, but hopefully not so stringent that important dissenting voices would be excluded. (It’s here that relying on a diverse set of such institutions would matter.) There are also issues with consolidating all of this information on the servers of a small number of commercial companies granted the ability to censor posts without accountability or transparency. In the early weeks of the pandemic, for example, there were multiple reports of Medium taking down essays that challenged the effectiveness of stay-at-home orders versus less strict social distancing. Today, this topic is mainstream and an important part of the political discussion concerning restarting the economy. We don’t necessarily want to trust engineers at one company to make the decisions about what topics the public should and should not be able to read about.

In the first stage of this crisis, a lot of energy has been devoted to building out the supply chains for medical equipment, therapeutics, and testing materials. As we come to realize that the free flow of expert information can play an equally important role in our response, it’s time that we build out the best possible content supply chains as well.

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Well d'uh, twatter is supposed to be "microblogging", they're using it in a way that wasn't intended in the first place. But since it's popular, no one wants to be left out. Alas, that's how people choose to get their news these days.

Blogs aren't really gone, you can still find good blogs out there: take a good look around Wordpress, Typepad, and to a lesser degree, Tumblr and Medium.
 
Blog = bog
bog.JPG
 
Twitter's a fucking cesspool of the absolute worst aspects of the online world, so anyone who uses it for any professional reason is just plain stupid.
 
If you wanna go back to web 1.0, you'll have to scrap your censorious tech-monopolies that run everything with bot-regulated shadowbans, made-up-on-the-fly TOS', and a predilection for bowing to social media pressure and banning anyone who dares become a target by speaking against the narrative and justifying it with "private company, we can if we want to".

And we know you won't do that.
 
Or, and here me out, maybe as a society we learn that not everyone needs to know our daily routines down to the smallest detail and delete twitter.

Honestly I have yet to meet someone who tries to find "Experts" on twitter that isn't retarded.
 
"Yes, we should shut down Twitter effective immediately and ban everyone who uses it from the internet."
>"But sir how will this stop the Coronavirus Pandemic?"
988.jpg
"Coronavirus?"
 
real good post here: https://kiwifarms.net/threads/null-suspended-off-of-twitter.68747/page-4#post-6349799

archive everything:

What makes Law Twitter particularly sad is its most notorious figure and his history.

Ken White used to run a blog called PopeHat. A prosecutor turned defense attorney, Ken blogged about a variety of topics, most famously free speech. He was a passionate free speech advocate and identified as a "lowercase-l libertarian," adamantly opposed to any form of government censorship applied to practically any speech. He also loved to intervene when news surfaced about bullshit lawsuits/legal threats intended to silence people -- sometimes he'd blog about the incident, sometimes he'd contact the lawyers/organizations issuing the threats, and on numerous instances he went out of his way to secure pro bono legal representation for the people being threatened or sued. Ken caught shit from people everywhere on the political spectrum for this, usually on the assumption that because Ken was defending some ne'er-do-well's right to speak he must agree with them (which was almost never the case). He was the embodiment of the old slogan, "I may disagree with what you say but I'll defend to the death your right to say it." In particular, Ken made it clear that any legal precedent that arose from silencing unpopular people could -- and inevitably would -- be used to silence everybody. And whenever anybody brought it up, Ken was ready with a multi-page rant about how the "shouting fire in a crowded theater" exception doesn't fucking apply to your shit.

Ken's opinions on legal matters were not always popular, but they were always well-reasoned and well-informed, drawing on his education, personal research, and extensive legal experience. He blogged often, and his posts were almost always worth reading even when they were about dumb shit like lame video games, blogosphere drama, marketers attempting unsuccessfully to get him to shill terrible products/services, and -- ominously -- his ongoing struggle with mental illness, namely crippling anxiety and depression.

Then, Ken White got addicted to Twitter.

PopeHat is dead. As of this post it has not been updated in months. Even before then, updates were sporadic and mostly consisted of "here's a link to a podcast on a different site where I ramble yet again about giant social media corporations' unquestionable constitutional right to deplatform people off the entire internet." The only place where Ken is still active is Twitter, where he posts all day every day under the nickname <WhateverOrangeManJustSaid>Hat. Ken's twitter account is shit and consists primarily of ancient catchphrases from his blog, attacks on anybody voicing any opinion less left-wing than the governing principles of the Khmer Rouge, retweets of anything that he thinks will make Orange Man or an Orange Man-connected person look bad, and Muh Private Companies. His perception of free speech has atrophied into something that occurs only in person on public property and he lashes out angrily at anybody expressing even a minor disagreement with this. He also likes to attack his former fellow bloggers and accuse them of having ties to white supremacy, and he has a blocklist rivaling that of Steve Shives.

And it's obvious why he does all of this: His prescription-marinated depression brain has grown dependent on the dopamine rush from clout. Ken plays Twitter like it's a clone of Cookie Clicker that manages to be even more autistic than the original, where he spends all day performing whatever action will score him the most likes and retweets. He's a broken shell of a man coasting on his former popularity and making any noise that will make the red number next to the Notification bell go up.

Ken's principles are as dead as his blog and I suspect that's for two reasons. First, he lives for nothing anymore except the ephemeral satisfaction from that lucky tweet that gets five-figure likes. Second, while he became famous by expressing the unpopular opinion that people have the right to voice unpopular opinions, he's too scared shitless to ever raise an unpopular opinion again. He's very aware of the problem of Twitter mobs and in every instance -- even the most horrific ones -- he's defended them on the grounds that social consequences, even ones that rise to the level of destroying somebody's entire life, are part and parcel of free speech. At the same time, Ken's old blog posts about his mental condition often got into shit like how he could get panic attacks when his phone vibrated for a new email, and how he once had a mental episode so bad that his family sent him to a psychiatric ward. The shit he's written about how fucked he is by depression and anxiety makes me think that if he ever wound up on the wrong side of what he once termed "internet shamestorming," he'd be dead by his own hand within a day. Fucker's riding on a tiger and the moment he dismounts or makes the wrong noise, he's meat.

Oh, and in case this post shows up on his Google alerts: Ken, I'd tell you to snort my taint, but you'll never extricate your nose from your own.

perfect example imo
 
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