• @Clbull
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    1 year ago

    That is the point where I’d well and truly delete my account.

    Elon Musk’s buyout to me was an elaborate Twitter shitpost which went horribly wrong when their board forced him to actually go through with the deal. But if Musk thinks I’ll pay money to use The App Formerly Known As Twitter, he’s having a laugh. My profile have a grand total of 33 followers and almost all my posts only get interacted with by phishing scammers and spam bots pushing OnlyFans pages. I’d be better off just writing my thoughts into a Notepad file since nobody’s going to read them anyways.

    Not sure why X is like this. It’s honestly been a problem with Twitter long before Elon Musk bought them out and it almost feels like I’m shadowbanned on the site for whatever reason. Twitter to me is a platform that only really felt useful if I wanted to follow a celebrity and it’s for that reason that I never felt a need to subscribe to Blue.

    Part of me wanted to stick around to the bitter end with a cup of soda and bowl of popcorn, because I thought it’d be entertaining to watch Elon Musk piss away sixty billion dollars, drive Twitter to the ground and then attempt to sue the ultra rich tech oligarchs who sold him the site. But this is just fucking depressing.

    We are in a day and age where Threads will end up being the largest (non-Chinese) microblogging platform, despite being even more barebones than your typical Mastodon instance and lacking both hashtags and trending topics.

    X is one of several reasons (the other being dating sites) why I well and truly subscribe to the dead internet theory.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      I have met real people and had real sex from dating sites, they’re way more useful than X.

      • @Clbull
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        1 year ago

        Yeah… no.

        Online dating from a straight male perspective fucking sucks. I have tried using various apps for the past decade to find someone to little luck.

        Ten years ago, back when you didn’t need to mutually match on every app to send a message, the cycle went: message lady, 99.99% get ignored, 0.009% get ghosted after first 3 messages, 0.0001% have an actual conversation.

        Maybe that convo will lead to a date. Over half of my dates in my early twenties led to her making excuses to bail early and blocking me afterwards, and I don’t even understand why.

        On an incredibly rare occasion have I found a relationship from online dating, but that’s fallen apart.

        Nowadays, nearly all of the sites that I used to use had been bought out by Match, including OkCupid, POF, Tinder, Hinge, and a few other major ones. These apps have been enshittified to be little more than Tinder clones in both functionality and price. Other apps are owned by Bumble and are just as bad. On all of these apps, I seldom get any matches and those I do are either phishing scammers or throwaway accounts plugging an OnlyFans page. All except Okcupid which is a strange anomaly.

        On Okcupid I have about 70 matches. I was given a month of Okcupid by Customer Support after having problems with a Turkish lady harassing me. Long story short, we switched to Telegram, I took twelve hours to reply to one of her messages and she went nuclear on me to the point of making multiple OKC accounts to send me abusive messages. I found out all these matches I had were African, Indonesian or Filipina ladies using the app to spoof their location and find a Western husband - and the means to a spousal visa to get into my country.

        Falsifying your location to match with people halfway across the world is blatantly against Okcupid’s Terms of Service, by the way. But they don’t give a shit. Profiles which I reported weeks ago still haven’t been banned.

        When most of the online dating apps are owned by Bernard Kim and he’s on a John Riccitello level of corporate greed, demanding £30 to £40 per month subscriptions just to see who has liked you, it’s why I think X may actually be less egregious.

    • squiblet
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      31 year ago

      That’s how Twitter was for me 2009-2016. I posted about programming, sysadmin stuff… zero engagement… posted photos about my travels, art hobbies, hiking, random observations, current events… pretty much nobody ever said anything about them. I had a successful nice web app from 2008-2012 and we started a Twitter for announcements, got 8,000 followers, but I doubt it brought us any new business.