• he/him/it/its

☀️ call me dakota or woolie! ☀️ 25 ☀️
☀️ brainweird ☀️ bi & polyam ☀️

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rebug page, for rebuggin'!

sharing cute critters, creative crafts & chattery things that make me smile!! here for a chill time after twitter fried my brain for three years. hogposting ahoy!

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sfw page, sex-positive guy
may rebug nonsexual nudity
no incest/pedo shit thanks

 

deeply depressed, vents a lot (sorry)


🐉 Skylanders
cohost.org/sheepburner
🐕 Dog Spam
cohost.org/reddog
🎨 Sheezy
sheezy.art/smobs
💬 Discord
kunekunehog
💰 Ko-fi
ko-fi.com/smobs

VampireExpert
@VampireExpert

I feel such an aversion to the idea of having numbers on social media now. Please do not allow me to know how popular I am compared to other people. Seeing numbers on everyone's likes sounds awful.


nago-
@nago-

it also has this cool effect that because you cannot directly see or measure who is popular, it's not clear who to imitate to do numbers, and therefore more people are just kinda doing... whatever works for them, subjectively.

and this is so much more interesting than, say, reddit which has an established canon of "correct" joke replies that follow a specified format

and super personally I think it's cool that I don't really know which of my followers are a "big deal" or not and it helps me to engage with folks on a more even level, and that feels very nice! I hope people who had big accounts elsewhere also find this nice.


@kunekunehog shared with:

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in reply to @VampireExpert's post:

in reply to @nago-'s post:

It's so surprising to me finding a person I follow here on another social media and being like "oh wow they have so many followers I had no idea." It really does feel more "even" here. I think that if my timeline didn't show duplicated posts I would 100% have no idea who is "popular" or not anymore.