you hit the nail on the head. and Remember when we used stuff like IRC, ICQ, AOLIM, forums, etc it was CONSTANTLY drilled into our heads to NEVER share our real names, hell even posting an actual photo of yourself was seen as extremely risky. It wasn’t until Myspace that I felt comfortable doing so. The only social media I use now is piefed. that’s it. I don’t even use Mastodon much anymore. it’s easy for me to just ditch that stuff on whim. I ditched facebook easily a good 10 years ago, I just don’t think about it.
I was born in 83 so not quite gen x but I think people my age have a similar mindset. we’re just kind on the cusp of it all. I think unlike Gen X who just said “nah i’m good” many millennials rather were like “meh, ok, ill give it a shot for a bit” before saying no.
I’m not that much older than you. Funny how the generation lines are drawn. And we’re both over 40, so it doesn’t matter anyway. Once you’re over the hill, it’s a moot point which decade you were born in… for a while.
I have a Piefed, I thought it would be so much different from Lemmy, but it’s just an older (looking/feeling) interface to the same communities. But I’m on RetroFed which tries to focus on retro computing/gaming. I rarely use it because it’s not that different an experience and I generally don’t like being two people on the same network/federation, it just feels disingenuous. If they don’t delete it for inactivity, I can use it if anything happens to this account.
The people who were in college circa 2004 were the first to rush into giving all of their personal data to large corporations online. They told Facebook their real name via their official school email address, school, location, interests, their romantic attachments and a map of their entire peer group for nothing.
you hit the nail on the head. and Remember when we used stuff like IRC, ICQ, AOLIM, forums, etc it was CONSTANTLY drilled into our heads to NEVER share our real names, hell even posting an actual photo of yourself was seen as extremely risky. It wasn’t until Myspace that I felt comfortable doing so. The only social media I use now is piefed. that’s it. I don’t even use Mastodon much anymore. it’s easy for me to just ditch that stuff on whim. I ditched facebook easily a good 10 years ago, I just don’t think about it.
I was born in 83 so not quite gen x but I think people my age have a similar mindset. we’re just kind on the cusp of it all. I think unlike Gen X who just said “nah i’m good” many millennials rather were like “meh, ok, ill give it a shot for a bit” before saying no.
I’m not that much older than you. Funny how the generation lines are drawn. And we’re both over 40, so it doesn’t matter anyway. Once you’re over the hill, it’s a moot point which decade you were born in… for a while.
I have a Piefed, I thought it would be so much different from Lemmy, but it’s just an older (looking/feeling) interface to the same communities. But I’m on RetroFed which tries to focus on retro computing/gaming. I rarely use it because it’s not that different an experience and I generally don’t like being two people on the same network/federation, it just feels disingenuous. If they don’t delete it for inactivity, I can use it if anything happens to this account.
The people who were in college circa 2004 were the first to rush into giving all of their personal data to large corporations online. They told Facebook their real name via their official school email address, school, location, interests, their romantic attachments and a map of their entire peer group for nothing.