How does the noosphere affect how we communicate? Discussions and arguments seem different on separate social media ecosystems, not only in how it's moderated, but how you reply, engage, react, like, comment, upvote. Add a profile with "karma" like that one cancer website, or have a trail of previous posts to dig up. If 4chan is relatively low moderation, has fewer features, and no reactions nor emojis, and limited image and video capabilities, shouldn't it be closer to normal human interaction? But it seems like everything is exaggerated here and the emotional distance of the noosphere makes people seethe or snap or go psychotic over the smallest things. Zoom calls don't feel like a real conversation, for similar reasons. Shouldn't 4chan be closer to genuine talking because there's no reactions or karma, so you have to talk like a normal conversation?The easy-to-spot side effects of internet communication are memes, slang, ironic humour, detachment, apathy, and listlessness. But I think those could be equally as part of any younger generation growing up; the Baby Boomers behaved that way. Is this whole thread misled? Maybe I am misnaming how we interact, and it isn't just the internet, but the general society and human condition.
>>107554427you aint seen nothing yet my dudewait till kids who grew up on chatgpt start getting jobs and be like >okay let's break this down every sentence