“Will you join wheat thins in the fight against lime disease?”
“Do I want to support Nazis?” The answer is no, it’s always no. “No, I do not want to support a Nazi”
“Users protesting by leaving should weigh the broader social implications of staying versus exiting.”
Hmmn, let me weigh up the broader social implications of . . . holocaust, world war, racial purification, hatred and divisiveness. Strangely, I think i can trust the gut on this one without having to do all the complex social cost benefit analysis.
Just stay there! We don’t want you here?
If you were a brand that wanted to be part of any cultural moments that were happening, Twitter was a great place to be
what about fucking don’t. fuck off our culture.
Ah yes the one time Oreos dunked on the Super Bowl.
Of course, the BBC led the way by having it’s own mastodon instance…
Which has been a trial for nearly two years now.
RIP mozilla.social
It’s hard. You’ll lose all those potential nazi customers. And inbred rednecks, mostly from US southern states.
What is really tricky is that most people that seek top level leadership roles align with fascism.
On the plus side, the BBC news website is normalising companies wanting to leave. This is a powerful message.
We just could not leave the NAZI camp the food was just too good. I get it corporations. When the dead bodies start showing up you will just step over them.
I think brands should stay on X, this way they don’t bother me with their advertisement on my social media.
Corporations with that Nazi fomo
I read the article. I didn’t see anything “tricky”. Just a lot of excuses.
“But if I don’t work with and promote Nazis, I will make less money! How will the Nazis watch my ads?”
Literally this. It’s as easy as making a Bluesky account and mass changing all links to it, and putting a permanent banner on their site with their handle.
Or not making the same mistake twice, and opting for something decentralised that your company owns, such as your own Mastodon instance.
Yeah, but then they have to pay someone to maintain it. And low though that cost may be, it’s precisely the sort of thing that C-levels like to cut when they feel like pretending that they actually do something.
It’s a hard thing for a C-level’s ego to set something up that they know someone else is going to cut later, or worse that they might be the one to “have to” cut it.
They have to pay someone to manage the account in the first place. No reason that worker can’t do both.
Typing in a box on a website provided by someone else can be done by practically anyone, even the boss themselves at a pinch. Heck, some of them love doing that.
Maintaining a server (or a service on a server) requires someone with more skills, which generally costs more money.
Some smart entrepreneur could offer a Mastodon-server-in-a-box service, where companies only pay hosting fees for company-name.social and a social network employee.