On the last Friday of each month I curate some of the observations and insights that were shared on social media. I call these Friday’s Finds.
“I fell in love with what now seems to be called web1. It was limitless, open, free. We now seem to be rushing towards the opposite of that with web3. Needlessly replicating the problems of the real world online. Scarcity, exclusivity, even eco-destruction. I don’t get it.” —@iamharaldur
“If you want to understand the difference between a network and a community, ask your Facebook friends to help paint your house. Networks connect; communities care.” —@mintzberg141
Open letter from The BMJ to Mark Zuckerberg
We are Fiona Godlee and Kamran Abbasi, editors of The BMJ [British Medical Journal], one of the world’s oldest and most influential general medical journals. We are writing to raise serious concerns about the “fact checking” being undertaken by third party providers on behalf of Facebook/Meta … Rather than investing a proportion of Meta’s substantial profits to help ensure the accuracy of medical information shared through social media, you have apparently delegated responsibility to people incompetent in carrying out this crucial task.
“… the birth of modern capitalism depended not only on the labour of enslaved people and the profits of the slave trade, but also on the example of slavery as a deregulated global enterprise … Slave labour supplied the cotton, sugar and other vital commodities. The profits from the sale of slaves created fortunes on both sides of the Atlantic. And, in a disturbing paradox, the founding fathers of laissez-faire saw the slave trade as a showcase of liberty.”
“I view the market as a useful tool applied in the right contexts. I don’t agree with abolition of the market (communists) nor replacement of society by the market (neoliberals). I’m more the Smith / Keynes / Hayek school (non US version).” —@swardley

