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@MTSlive

To monitor the situation is to watch history in the making

Sumali Mart 2026
21 Sinusundan18.8K Mga Tagasunod
MTS
MTS@MTSlive·
.@balajis: "Free speech is open borders for ideology."
Balaji@balajis

(1) One way of thinking about the last ten years is that the American left busted the physical borders of the right, while the right smashed through the digital borders of the left. (2) Because the left relied on mind control, on controlling the discourse. And the busting of those digital borders by the Internet is what hurt them the most. They wanted stern penalties for crossing the line, for saying the wrong thing. So then the left tried to re-impose speech controls, but lost control. Will the right succeed in re-imposing border controls? We will see. (3) Btw, of course I am aware that these are different, and you can argue for the merits of both digital and physical borders, or neither. But if you argue for only one you may soon need to impose the other. (4) That is: if you open the physical borders you will be letting in people with new ideas, which will bust the digital borders you had around thoughts. (5) Conversely, if you open the digital borders with free speech, there will be many who push for more permissive migration, which may eventually bust the physical borders. Hence, totally free speech may inadvertently lead to open borders. (6) Let’s call the case with two borders “Chinese Control”, where there’s both a Great Firewall and a Great Wall. Here there is a strict and unmistakable combination of a digital and physical border. All speech is not allowed and all people are not allowed. (7) Conversely, let’s call the case with no borders “American Anarchy”. Here, there are no digital or physical borders at all. It’s just a North American continent where everyone is completely free to post online and move offline. Note that this ostensible freedom may look more like anarchy, hence the name. (8) My view is that we’re going to need an Internet Intermediate, which is neither coercive Chinese Control nor chaotic American Anarchy. In that third form, you create startup societies with both digital and physical borders…but all residents freely opt in to those constraints, and can opt out at any time. (9) In general, it’s obvious that open borders means invasion. It’s a little less obvious, but free speech in the age of the Internet means *ideological* invasion. That is why most practical forums (from Slacks to Discords) have moderators and moderation policies and banhammers. (10) Anyway. Thinking about the last ten years as mutual border busting by left and right is an interesting lens. That’s why they are both so heated. I may be more sympathetic to one side, but it’s always useful to understand both.

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MTS@MTSlive·
SITUATION DETECTED: Tim Cook steps down as Apple CEO, to be replaced by John Ternus.
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MTS@MTSlive·
.@balajis on public disclosed AI vs. public undisclosed AI: "Whenever I see a slide deck that has AI content in it, it just shows that either they're dumb or they think you're dumb." "They're dumb because they can't tell the difference between normal text and AI text, or they think you're dumb and they can get one over on you and spend a little bit of effort to just flood you with a bunch of words."
Philippe Lemoine@phl43

After the exchange between @NateSilver538 and @nikitabier, I did a little test to check whether that was true and, to my surprise, what I found suggests that link deboosting was indeed reversed. What I did is randomly sample 15 tweets by @nytimes between 2019 and today, compute the weekly average number of likes and retweets they got and plot the results along with a trend line. The idea is that likes and retweets are probably a decent proxy for reach and @nytimes only posts tweets with external links, so by looking at this, we should be able to see any changes in the algorithm with respect to how links are treated. As you can see, it's pretty clear that, starting around the spring/summer of 2023, posts with links started to be penalized and eventually they were completely nuked until the spring/summer of 2025, when a reversal of that policy seems to have started. To be honest, this isn't what I was expecting to find, so even if that's just a quick and dirty test and it's hardly a definitive proof, it's good news and I thought I should share the results.

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MTS@MTSlive·
@10x_er Come on the show
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Dan Romero
Dan Romero@dwr·
.@MTSlive has the opportunity to do a different niche (CNN) than TBPN (SportsCenter x CNBC). Lots of pulling up tweets and tabs live. (Balaji is the perfect first guest for that.) Should feel like doomscrolling with internet friends. More Twitch stream than video podcast (but still do the clips). Basically the link exhaust from *the group chats* in video form.
Dan Romero tweet media
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MTS@MTSlive·
Introducing MTS: The first timeline-native news network that's always on. Monitoring tech, finance, geopolitics and culture — as it happens. We are Live Now.
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Taylor Lorenz
Taylor Lorenz@TaylorLorenz·
I think it’s great to have more media companies centered on live coverage of the news. Most social media is actually terrible for following news live, it’s something X has always excelled at. Streaming is ascendant as a format, and I hope @MTSlive does well! 🎉
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