- Joined
- Sep 27, 2019
I think a lot of it comes down to being a generational thing.
Older millennials and younger Gen Xers grew up with online forums being the default “social media” of our time. Each of these forums were typically a small to moderate sized community, you recognized users and weren’t lost in a sea of thousands just autistically screeching. As such, each forum developed its own form of etiquette and culture. Fuck up too many times and you got banned.
Younger millennials and Zoomers grew up with MySpace, Facebook, Reddit and Discord as their primary forms of social media; thousands upon thousands of people just shouting into the void with no rhyme or reason. Aping the most popular opinions to farms likes or upvotes instead of feeling free to speak your true thoughts. It was all just a vapid popularity contest on who could shout the loudest, there was no real sense of community like forums had in their heyday. Piss off one random on Plebbit? Oh well, you’ll probably never interact with them again. Feel free to keep sperging and acting like a retard. Piss off someone on a forum typically composed of a couple hundred active users at most? Shit gets noticed and nipped in the bud. Kids who didn’t grow up with that can’t understand the etiquette differentials between tight knit forums and vast social networks.
Older millennials and younger Gen Xers grew up with online forums being the default “social media” of our time. Each of these forums were typically a small to moderate sized community, you recognized users and weren’t lost in a sea of thousands just autistically screeching. As such, each forum developed its own form of etiquette and culture. Fuck up too many times and you got banned.
Younger millennials and Zoomers grew up with MySpace, Facebook, Reddit and Discord as their primary forms of social media; thousands upon thousands of people just shouting into the void with no rhyme or reason. Aping the most popular opinions to farms likes or upvotes instead of feeling free to speak your true thoughts. It was all just a vapid popularity contest on who could shout the loudest, there was no real sense of community like forums had in their heyday. Piss off one random on Plebbit? Oh well, you’ll probably never interact with them again. Feel free to keep sperging and acting like a retard. Piss off someone on a forum typically composed of a couple hundred active users at most? Shit gets noticed and nipped in the bud. Kids who didn’t grow up with that can’t understand the etiquette differentials between tight knit forums and vast social networks.