NYC and Florida brand Social Media Toxic as CEOs Head to DC to Testify
Jim Louderback
Creator Economy Sherpa | Award Winning Curator, Moderator & Speaker | "Inside the Creator Economy" Newsletter | Board of Director | Geek
Florida House Votes to Ban Social Media:? Well, just for kids under 16 .? The legislative body zeroed in on the addictive nature of the platform.? This was one of my top trends for 2024, and this is just the beginning.? The bill still needs to pass the senate and then get signed by the governor, which seems likely.? It will still be challenged in court by the platforms but focusing on the addictive nature of the platforms – rather than the content – might suffice where others failed.??
Mr Beast Goes to Twitter:? The numbers are in.? Mr Beast just windowed a 4-month-old video onto Twitter as a test.? The video had 217M views as of Friday on YouTube.? It delivered 156M ”impressions” on Twitter, and most importantly $263K in revenue.? Even Mr. Beast called it a bit of a fa?ade , as advertisers piled into the action – raising the revenue. X appeared to be boosting the video as an ad unit too – many users reported seeing it more than once.? And since the impression count increments each time a video is viewed for 2 seconds, multiple individual exposures lead to multiple impressions per unique viewer. YouTube only increments the view counter after 30 seconds. The numbers are funny.? But the strategy is legit.? Windowing four-month-old content to different platforms is absolutely viable– if your sponsors are viewed as well.? We’ll likely never know the effectiveness of those video views, but it’s certainly worth more testing.
Swifties vs. the Sickos:? Fandom to the rescue!? When Ai-generated explicit deepfake Taylor Swift content flooded X , there was much handwringing that somebody ought to do something.? Well someone did – but it wasn’t X.? It wasn’t the government.? It was the army of Taylor Swift fans .? Through SEO spiking, doxing and other techniques, those awful images and videos are now nearly impossible to find.? The world is now waking up to the power of fandom, and how when unleashed it’s hard to control – let alone slow down.? Perhaps this vigilante justice will spur our legal machinery to act over deepfakes and sextortion.? Perhaps it will reign in the pornographic hellhole that was once Twitter. We can only hope.
How Creators Can Survive Without Support:? I expanded on last week’s newsletter about the YouTube layoffs with a look at communities for creators – and other resources.? My conclusion:? Creators need to tithe 10% to communities and tools to help them connect and grow – and they are really, truly on their own.????
Who Won the GenZ Brand Wars in 2023?? This very personalized report from two experts in the field tries to answer that.? Inside you’ll find 10 breezy analyses of the big winners and emerging brands to monitor this year as well.? There’s a lot of data out there you can parse through – but sometimes you just need experts to give you their gut.
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Not all Social Media is toxic. Much depends upon who you follow and why. If we want our children to be protected from Nazis and hate speech, we must act AS PARENTS and not ask the government to intervene, but instead ask the advertisers to leave malignant services such as Twitter / X or Trump Social. The people I follow on TikTok and Threads are interested in science (especially astronomy), synthesizers & music technology, movies, humor, dogs, progressive politics, and upbeat topics. I doubt I'll fall prey to an eating disorder following these people.
CoFounder & CEO @2btube | Spain Chapter President ESSEC Alumni | Member FrenchFounders | IWF | Ex CanalPlus A&E Television | IG @fabiennef | Obsessed w Creator Economy; Digital Content; Impact; Health3.0; Angel Investing
10 个月Very insightful Jim Louderback. I do think there is a lot of regulations that still need to happen around advertising transparency and a a gigantic ton of research, communication and regulations around social plaforms x kids x recommendation algorithms. cc Jean-Lou Fourquet Stephane Vojetta
Building awesome stuff fast | $1M MRR by 30 or bust
10 个月Very interested to see if anything will actually get done about the addiction-engineered apps. I’m starting to sense a bit of a trend towards fixing this issue. Hopefully this is the start of some big changes.
Product @ LinkedIn
10 个月Thanks for sharing Jim! Definitely curious for what's to come next on the social media ban in Florida, especially since it's already such an integrated part of how kids interact and keep up with each other. It'll also be interesting to see what part of social media platforms are deemed "addictive" (infinite scrolling, content algorithms, etc). Great read as usual!
I've been involved with Childrens Media policy since the early days when laws like COPPA were formulated. Served on the National Academy of Sciences, addressed FOSI (Family Online Safety Institute) testified before congressional hearings. My thoughts remain pretty unwavering. Banning things don't work. And besides these kids are gonna need AI skills and digital literacy to survive. What does work? A combo of tools and parents. Parental settings to limit time spent online (even better if there's some reward incentive for NOT spending time online). Parental settings to limit visiting "R" rated sites (yes every site should have an age rating just like the movies. Every social platform signs on to making these tools more upfront and easier to use. They tithe a portion of their revenue (the carrot being if they do it they will be exempt from prosecution). The government funds PBS Kids for Internet.... great programming that's safe and social. I'm all about carrots, not sticks.