I'm opting to pass on BlueSky since everything I've heard paints it as having all the same problems Twitter had before I left. I can't stand the TikTok and Instagram formats. I follow a few comics people on LinkedIn, but that's hardly a mecca of creator content. I'm on Mastodon, which also isn't used very heavily by the comics community. As you can see, I've gotten some updates from creators on YouTube, although based on the trends I've seen in what they've been serving up over the past six months or so, I expect I'll be presented with more garbage than anything useful within the next year. I'm seeing more creators get back to email newsletters and re-adding RSS feeds to their own sites; I'm hoping those trends continue before we get to the point where social media becomes useless to me.
Logically, I get why all this is happening, and the basic challenge of being a creator and trying to get the word out about your next/current project in an absolute avalanche of information and announcements. It's all indicative of larger problems with news and communication more broadly and, as I've already suggested, a problem that I know I've certainly been wrestling with for several years now. And because I've been wrestling with it for so long already and haven't resolved it since the landscape has been constantly shifting, I don't expect to resolve it any time soon either.
I suppose my point here -- besides just taking some time to vent -- is to suggest that you keep an active eye/ear out for comics news beyond a handful of websites, and that you continue to search for news, that you don't assume it'll be served up to you through your favorite outlet. It is indeed more work on your part, but you get -- for my money -- better, more satisfying results. Because I can guarantee you right now that reading about a single night without a curfew in Korea is going to be more interesting to me than whatever it is the Justice League are doing.
1 comments:
I was dubious about BlueSky initially. Then Dorsey lost interest in a service that wouldn't be terrible and left. The developers are very earnest and funny, and they continue to improve moderation and other tools to make it a fairly civil experience. I'd say at present, it's nearly better than Twitter ever was in most ways.
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