Crooked Timber, the group blog of which I’m a member turns 20 today. Here’s a post I’ve written to mark the occasion. Not quite 20 years ago, I got an invitation to spend a week as a visiting blogger at an exciting new group blog called Crooked Timber. In the manner of the most catastrophic house guests, I managed to turn that into permanent residence. Looking back at posts from that time, it’s startling how active we were; with multiple posts most days. That’s ebbed away to one or two posts per week, but we are still here to celebrate our 20th anniversary, unlike most of the people who were blogging back then. It’s easy enough to see why this was so. Back then, although the term ‘social media’ wasn’t in widespread use, social media was blogs and not much else. There
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Crooked Timber, the group blog of which I’m a member turns 20 today. Here’s a post I’ve written to mark the occasion.
Not quite 20 years ago, I got an invitation to spend a week as a visiting blogger at an exciting new group blog called Crooked Timber. In the manner of the most catastrophic house guests, I managed to turn that into permanent residence.
Looking back at posts from that time, it’s startling how active we were; with multiple posts most days. That’s ebbed away to one or two posts per week, but we are still here to celebrate our 20th anniversary, unlike most of the people who were blogging back then.
It’s easy enough to see why this was so. Back then, although the term ‘social media’ wasn’t in widespread use, social media was blogs and not much else. There was no Facebook or Twitter and mainstream media maintained an air of snooty disdain.
Once these commercial platforms arrived, and began attracting millions, then billions of users, the writing was on the wall for traditional blogging. Their features made them accessible to lots of people for whom blogging was just too difficult and, at least initially, their reliance on advertising seemed like a small price to pay. Blogs carried on, but as bloggers moved on or passed on, or just got tired, they mostly weren’t replaced by new entrants.
The deal for users got worse and worse over time, in the process Cory Doctorow calls ensh*ttification. But network effects worked powerfully to keep us all locked into the platforms where our families/friends/interlocutors remained.
Until recently, there was no end in sight to this process. But, as Stein’s Law has it “If something cannot go on forever, it will stop.” In the last couple years, we’ve seen disastrous mis-steps from both Facebook and Twitter, as well as a sharp decline in public opinion of the tech giants and their products.
That’s allowed the emergence of alternatives to advertising-driven networks where “algorithms” (they’re really just models) determine what you see and what you don’t. The most important examples, for me, at any rate, have been Mastodon (non-commercial Twitter alternative) along with the larger Fediverse, and Substack, a platform for subscription-supported newsletters.
We don’t yet know what will become of all this. But we have seen a version of this movie before. The original Internet, built by academics was strictly non-commercial. The introduction of the .com domain produced an explosion of commercial offerings and a speculative mania unsurpassed in scale and silliness, at least until the advent of Bitcoin. A crucial part of this was the attempt by portals like Yahoo and AOL to created “walled gardens”, where uses would remain while they were online, rather than wandering the wilds of the Internet.
The original weblogs, from which we got the unlovely abbreviation ‘blogs’, helped users to escape the walled gardens by linking to interesting sites, typically with a sentence or two of commentary, much like Twitter and other ‘microblogs’. But as posts got longer, blogs started linking to each other, and engaging in lengthy discussion. The arrival of comments extended the process. The rise of blogs was one of the factors that broke down the original walled gardens.
The wheel has turned again. It’s unlikely that blogs will ever again play the central role that they did in the early 2000s. But, we can hope we are on an upward phase in a long-running cycle, rather than the inexorable decline that seemed to be our fate until recently.