I guess the data mining was the missing ingredient for popularity?

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    239 months ago

    Personally I dont see the appeal in the short video format in general and I really don’t understand why it has become so popular.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      29
      edit-2
      9 months ago

      That’s because you were born before 2005 and still have some semblance of an attention span

      • @riodoro1
        link
        159 months ago

        Fucking this. Zoomers were raised with gifs and algorithms sinking any video longer than 5 minutes to the depths of search results. Every media outlet wanted these people to only be able to read the clickbait title, click it, and immediately be distracted by flashy, animated ad. Their brainwashing is insanely successful. To me a tiktok or instagram scrolling looks like a feverish dream of constantly changing colors and shapes, nothing that resembles content that you want to focus on.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          29 months ago

          Some pre 2005 people are zoomers tho, the oldest zoomers are 24. Gen Alpha might be more fitting.

          • The Stoned Hacker
            link
            39 months ago

            Yeah I’m pre-2005 and still look back on Vine fondly. The difference I think is that Vine was genuinely kind of innocent. It didn’t have a massive corporate backing until the one that killed it, and there wasn’t really a way to monetize it back then. It was just a goofy place on the internet with weird, niche content that was also ubiquitous amongst the younger generations. It sadly laid the grounds for TikTok, but it needs to be remembered that Vine was killed because it wasn’t monetizable, at least not back then. It’s the difference between early internet and corporate internet.