![]() Mark Zuckerberg, still smarting from the ruthless mocking of his legless metaverse avatars, saw a relatively low-risk and affordable opportunity to both show up his old sparring partner and make a play for the digital town square Musk paid US$40 billion for in the worst deal since Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation bought a dying Myspace for US$580 million. Only, they didn’t stay on Mastodon, instead lingering, discontented and embittered, on Twitter, as Elon Musk stopped employing the people and paying the hosting bills that held Twitter together. Six months ago, they were tweeting “I’m now on #Mastodon”, certain that Twitter was about to implode, rather like the Titan submersible did in a bubbly cloud of its creator’s wilful negligence and technical incompetence. “I’m now on #Threads,” tweeted dozens of my friends and colleagues on Thursday as they clambered aboard Meta’s new Twitter rival. ![]() "Threads content moderation is superior to what a depleted Twitter now offers," Peter Griffin writes. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |