Social Networks

  • Caught: “X” agitator

    In an exclusive for Conservative News Site, a suspect in a worldwide chain of networked agitators against Intelligence and Policing officials has now been spotted.

    He’s believed to be sponsored by the State of Russia but he’s not handed a portfolio of work to do.

    A suspect
    A suspect alleged of online sexual harassment and surveying for Intelligence profiles seen here in a public space.

    His account activity is masked by Security operatives that enable him to still operate. These details are accurate and true.

    A graphic
    Screenshots of an “X” social profile belonging to the suspect that shows his online activity.

    His belief is that State actors seek to persecute him, but he’s believed to have mental health issues that result in outcomes such as online sexual harassment, and the paranoid surveying of online profiles.

  • Making trousers great again

    The power grab by owners is well underway in America. It involves strong brands and includes the thoughts and opinions of the hundreds of millions of customers it involves.

    It began in 2004, after Mark Zuckerberg launched Facebook. Meta, now its parent company, is in the editor zone. A series of developments in its moderation practices rival newsrooms.

    In 2013, Jeff Bezos walked onto the scene with his purchase of The Washington Post. The Amazon founder invested money, backed big journalism, and fought to keep its line.

    In 2022, Elon Musk moved to take over Twitter. He renamed it, and rapidly expanded its features, and reach. The social network now makes headlines, and its own viral trends.

    It affects ideas of enforcement, endorsement, and change that became synonymous with news media organisations beforetime. A new age of popular politics has a new narrative.

  • Socially platforming our future

    The invention of X and its alternative forms such as Meta’s products, including its newest iteration Threads, is a new venture for big tech companies beyond the stoical digital domain of the Internet.

    The fluid prose-based exchanges and lucid experience online helps us to see technology in innovating ways. Our lives have been changed by it already, such as new relationships, old friendships coming back, and the tips and tricks that make our friendships grow.

    The platforms of the future are like these, but the real question circulating higher realms is the notion of how they’re used. It’s not an exercise in litigation but more of a moral question of how society progresses due to and not in spite of new media like social networks.

  • How elections play out

    A dispute on social media is not what an election is for. It’s not a part of the plan to fall out but it’s what some want in spite of the rules.

    An example is a post on X by Elon Musk. Musk contrasts his view on migration against Kamala Harris and gets a lot of attention. It has over 100 million views.

    It’s not exceptional and other users who engage get big results too. One example is a reply which has over 20,000 likes by a user with a low follower count.

    It’s not an accurate example for a legal issue but it meets a threshold for participation. It doesn’t achieve credibility or placate online fact checkers, however.