During the rise of social media and content aggregators there grew a misconception that crosstalk was dependent on centralization. That if you wanted a convenient sort of “deck” of the various forums, chat, social updates, videos, etc. that you enjoy, it had to be all under one company’s umbrella.
The irony being, the early internet was explicitly built around that concept. E-mail could be sent from any domain to any other domain, web browsers could access any website, they weren’t restricted to just the e-mail addresses associated with that company or just websites hosted by the company that made the the web browser. We did it before, we can do it again.
During the rise of social media and content aggregators there grew a misconception that crosstalk was dependent on centralization. That if you wanted a convenient sort of “deck” of the various forums, chat, social updates, videos, etc. that you enjoy, it had to be all under one company’s umbrella.
The irony being, the early internet was explicitly built around that concept. E-mail could be sent from any domain to any other domain, web browsers could access any website, they weren’t restricted to just the e-mail addresses associated with that company or just websites hosted by the company that made the the web browser. We did it before, we can do it again.