{"id":85146,"date":"2025-09-02T14:55:48","date_gmt":"2025-09-02T14:55:48","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com"},"modified":"2025-09-02T17:40:21","modified_gmt":"2025-09-02T17:40:21","slug":"the-last-days-of-social-media","status":"publish","type":"wpm-article","link":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/the-last-days-of-social-media","title":{"rendered":"The Last Days Of Social Media"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>At first glance, the feed looks familiar, a seamless carousel of \u201cFor You\u201d updates gliding beneath your thumb. But d\u00e9j\u00e0\u2011vu sets in as 10 posts from 10 different accounts carry the same stock portrait and the same breathless promise \u2014 \u201cclick here for free pics\u201d or \u201chere is the one productivity hack you need in 2025.\u201d Swipe again and three near\u2011identical replies appear, each from a pout\u2011filtered avatar directing you to \u201cfree pics.\u201d Between them sits an ad for a cash\u2011back crypto card.<\/p><div>\n    <iframe loading=\"lazy\" id=\"noa-web-audio-player\"\n            style=\"border: none\"\n            src=\"https:\/\/embed-player.newsoveraudio.com\/v4?key=n0e13g&#038;id=https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/the-last-days-of-social-media\/&#038;bgColor=F3F3F3&#038;color=6D6D6D&#038;progressBgColor=F7F7F7&#038;progressBorderColor=6D6D6D&#038;playColor=F3F3F3&#038;titleColor=383D3D&#038;timeColor=6D6D6D&#038;speedColor=6D6D6D&#038;noaLinkColor=6D6D6D&#038;noaLinkHighlightColor=039BE5\"\n            width=\"100%\" height=\"110px\"><\/iframe>\n<\/div><p>Scroll further and recycled TikTok clips with \u201coriginal audio\u201d bleed into Reels on Facebook and Instagram; AI\u2011stitched football highlights showcase players\u2019 limbs bending like marionettes. Refresh once more, and the woman who enjoys your snaps of sushi rolls has seemingly spawned five clones.<\/p><p>Whatever remains of genuine, human content is increasingly sidelined by algorithmic prioritization, receiving fewer interactions than the engineered content and AI slop optimized solely for clicks.&nbsp;<\/p><p>These are the last days of social media as we know it.<\/p><h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"h-drowning-the-real\"><strong>Drowning The Real<\/strong><\/h2><p>Social media was built on the romance of authenticity. Early platforms sold themselves as conduits for genuine connection: stuff you wanted to see, like your friend\u2019s wedding and your cousin\u2019s dog.<\/p><p>Even influencer culture, for all its artifice, promised that behind the ring\u2011light stood an actual person. But the attention economy, and more recently, the generative AI-fueled late attention economy, have broken whatever social contract underpinned that illusion. The feed no longer feels crowded with people but crowded with content. At this point, it has far less to do with people than with consumers and consumption.<\/p><p>In recent years, Facebook and other platforms that facilitate billions of daily interactions have slowly morphed into the internet\u2019s largest repositories of <a href=\"https:\/\/cyber.fsi.stanford.edu\/news\/ai-spam-accounts-build-followers\">AI\u2011generated spam<\/a>. Research has found what users plainly see: tens of thousands of machine\u2011written posts <a href=\"https:\/\/doi.org\/10.37016\/mr-2020-151\">now flood<\/a> public groups \u2014&nbsp;pushing scams, chasing clicks \u2014&nbsp;with <a href=\"https:\/\/www.wired.com\/story\/gadget-lab-podcast-632\/\">clickbait<\/a> headlines, half\u2011coherent listicles and hazy lifestyle images stitched together in AI tools like Midjourney.<\/p><p>It\u2019s all just vapid, empty shit produced for engagement\u2019s sake. Facebook is \u201csloshing\u201d in low-effort AI-generated posts, as Arwa Mahdawi <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/global\/commentisfree\/2025\/jan\/08\/ai-generated-slop-slowly-killing-internet-nobody-trying-to-stop-it\">notes<\/a> in The Guardian; some even bolstered by algorithmic boosts, like \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/www.niemanlab.org\/2024\/04\/from-shrimp-jesus-to-fake-self-portraits-ai-generated-images-have-become-the-latest-form-of-social-media-spam\/\">Shrimp Jesus<\/a>.\u201d<\/p><p>The difference between human and synthetic content is becoming increasingly indistinguishable, and platforms seem unable, or uninterested, in trying to police it. Earlier this year, CEO Steve Huffman pledged to \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/www.reddit.com\/user\/spez\/comments\/1kfciml\/reddits_next_chapter_smarter_easier_still_human\/\">keep Reddit human<\/a>,\u201d a tacit admission that floodwaters were already lapping at the last high ground. TikTok, meanwhile, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.newsguardtech.com\/special-reports\/tiktok-content-farms-use-ai-voiceovers-to-mass-produce-political-misinformation\/\">swarms<\/a> with AI narrators presenting concocted news reports and <a href=\"https:\/\/restofworld.org\/2023\/ai-tiktok-creators-rewrite-history\/\">\u201cwhat\u2011if\u201d histories<\/a>. A few creators do append labels disclaiming that their videos depict \u201cno real events,\u201d but many creators don\u2019t bother, and many consumers don\u2019t seem to care.<\/p><p>The problem is not just the rise of fake material, but the collapse of context and the acceptance that truth no longer matters as long as our cravings for colors and noise are satisfied. Contemporary social media content is more often rootless, detached from cultural memory, interpersonal exchange or shared conversation. It arrives fully formed, optimized for attention rather than meaning, producing a kind of semantic sludge, posts that look like language yet say almost nothing.&nbsp;<\/p><p>We\u2019re drowning in this nothingness.<\/p><h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"h-the-bot-girl-economy\"><strong>The Bot-Girl Economy<\/strong><\/h2><p>If spam (AI or otherwise) is the white noise of the modern timeline, its dominant melody is a different form of automation: the hyper\u2011optimized, sex\u2011adjacent human avatar. She appears everywhere, replying to trending tweets with selfies, promising \u201cfunny memes in bio\u201d and linking, inevitably, to OnlyFans or one of its proxies. Sometimes she is real. Sometimes she is not. Sometimes she is a he, sitting in a <a href=\"https:\/\/www.economist.com\/leaders\/2025\/02\/06\/the-vast-and-sophisticated-global-enterprise-that-is-scam-inc\">compound in Myanmar<\/a>. Increasingly, it makes no difference.<\/p><p>This convergence of bots, scammers, brand-funnels and soft\u2011core marketing underpins what might be called <em>the bot-girl economy<\/em>, a parasocial marketplace <a href=\"https:\/\/doi.org\/10.1111\/gwao.13047\">fueled<\/a> in a large part by economic precarity. At its core is a transactional logic: Attention is scarce, intimacy is monetizable and platforms generally won\u2019t intervene so long as engagement <a href=\"https:\/\/scienceblog.com\/social-media-bots-create-more-chatter-but-less-meaningful-conversation-research-shows\/\">stays high<\/a>. As more women now turn to online sex work, lots of men are eager to pay them for their services. And as these workers try to cope with the precarity imposed by platform metrics and competition, some can spiral, forever downward, into a transactional attention-to-intimacy logic that eventually turns them into more bot than human. To hold attention, some creators increasingly opt to behave like algorithms themselves, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.supercreator.app\/automation#:~:text=Supercreator%20%2D%20Engage%20Fans%20With%20OnlyFans,more%20proactive%20in%20your%20conversations.\">automating <\/a>replies, optimizing content for engagement, or mimicking affection at scale. The distinction between performance and intention must surely erode as real people perform as synthetic avatars and synthetic avatars mimic real women.<\/p><p>There is loneliness, desperation and predation everywhere.<\/p><!-- Quote Block Template -->\n\n<figure class=\"quote\">\n\n  <blockquote class=\"quote__container\">\n\n    <div class=\"quote__text\">\n      &#8220;Genuine, human content is increasingly sidelined by algorithmic prioritization, receiving fewer interactions than the engineered content and AI slop optimized solely for clicks.&#8221;    <\/div>\n\n    \n    <div class=\"quote__social-media\">\n      <div\n        class=\"a2a_kit a2a_kit_size_35 a2a_default_style\"\n        data-a2a-url=\"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/wpm-article\/85146\"\n        data-a2a-title='\"Genuine, human content is increasingly sidelined by algorithmic prioritization, receiving fewer interactions than the engineered content and AI slop optimized solely for clicks.\"'\n      >\n        <a class=\"a2a_button_facebook\"><\/a>\n        <a class=\"a2a_button_twitter\"><\/a>\n        <a class=\"a2a_button_email\"><\/a>\n      <\/div>\n    <\/div>\n  <\/blockquote>\n<\/figure><p>The bot-girl is more than just a symptom; she is a proof of concept for how social media bends even aesthetics to the logic of engagement. Once, profile pictures (both real and synthetic) aspired to hyper-glamor, unreachable beauty filtered through fantasy. But that fantasy began to underperform as average men sensed the ruse, recognizing that supermodels typically don\u2019t send them DMs. And so, the system adapted, surfacing profiles that felt more plausible, more emotionally available. Today\u2019s avatars project a curated accessibility: They\u2019re attractive but not flawless, styled to suggest they might genuinely be interested in you. It\u2019s a calibrated effect, just human enough to convey plausibility, just artificial enough to scale. She has to look more human to stay afloat, but act more bot to keep up. Nearly everything is socially engineered for maximum interaction: the like, the comment, the click, the private message.<\/p><p>Once seen as the fringe economy of cam sites, OnlyFans has become the dominant digital marketplace for sex workers. In 2023, the then-seven-year-old platform <a href=\"https:\/\/variety.com\/2024\/digital\/news\/onlyfans-payments-2023-financials-revenue-creator-earnings-1236135425\/\">generated<\/a> $6.63 billion in gross payments from fans, with $658 million in profit before tax. Its success has bled across the social web; platforms like X (formerly Twitter) now serve as de facto marketing layers for OnlyFans creators, with thousands of accounts running fan-funnel operations, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.businessinsider.com\/how-to-promote-onlyfans-according-to-creators\">baiting<\/a> users into paid subscriptions.&nbsp;<\/p><p>The tools of seduction are also changing. One 2024 study <a href=\"https:\/\/arxiv.org\/abs\/2401.02627\">estimated<\/a> that thousands of X accounts use AI to generate fake profile photos. Many content creators have also <a href=\"https:\/\/aijourn.com\/how-ai-is-revolutionizing-digital-content-creation-from-face-swaps-to-lip-syncing\/\">begun using AI<\/a> for talking-head videos, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.tiktok.com\/@itstarachristina\/video\/7350403031969713441?lang=en\">synthetic voices<\/a> or endlessly varied selfies. Content is likely A\/B tested for click-through rates. Bios are written with conversion in mind. DMs are automated or <a href=\"https:\/\/www.wired.com\/story\/onlyfans-models-are-using-ai-impersonators-to-keep-up-with-their-dms\/\">outsourced<\/a> to AI impersonators. For users, the effect is a strange hybrid of influencer, chatbot and parasitic marketing loop. One minute you\u2019re arguing politics, the next, you\u2019re being pitched a girlfriend experience by a bot.&nbsp;<\/p><h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"h-engagement-in-freefall\"><strong>Engagement In Freefall<\/strong><\/h2><p>While content proliferates, engagement is evaporating. Average interaction rates across major platforms are declining fast: Facebook and X posts now scrape an average 0.15% engagement, while Instagram has dropped 24% year-on-year. Even TikTok has <a href=\"https:\/\/doi.org\/10.48550\/arXiv.2401.02627\">begun to plateau<\/a>. People aren\u2019t connecting or conversing on social media like they used to; they\u2019re just wading through slop, that is, low-effort, low-quality content produced at scale, often with AI, for engagement.<\/p><p>And much of it <em>is<\/em> slop: Less than half of American adults <a href=\"https:\/\/www.pewresearch.org\/journalism\/fact-sheet\/social-media-and-news-fact-sheet\/\">now rate<\/a> the information they see on social media as \u201cmostly reliable\u201d\u2014 down from roughly two-thirds in the mid-2010s.&nbsp; Young adults register the steepest collapse, which is unsurprising; as digital natives, they better understand that the content they scroll upon wasn\u2019t necessarily produced by humans. And yet, they continue to scroll.<\/p><p>The timeline is no longer a source of information or social presence, but more of a mood-regulation device, endlessly replenishing itself with just enough novelty to suppress the anxiety of stopping. Scrolling has become a form of ambient dissociation, half-conscious, half-compulsive, closer to scratching an itch than seeking anything in particular. People know the feed is fake, they just don\u2019t care.&nbsp;<\/p><p>Platforms have little incentive to stem the tide. Synthetic accounts are cheap, tireless and lucrative because they never demand wages or unionize. Systems designed to surface peer-to-peer engagement are now systematically filtering out such activity, because what counts as engagement has changed. Engagement is now about raw user attention \u2013 time spent, impressions, scroll velocity \u2013 and the net effect is an online world in which you are constantly being addressed but never truly spoken to.<\/p><h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"h-the-great-unbundling\"><strong>The Great Unbundling<\/strong><\/h2><p>Social media\u2019s death rattle will not be a bang but a shrug.<\/p><p>These networks once promised a single interface for the whole of online life: Facebook as social hub, Twitter as news\u2011wire, YouTube as broadcaster, Instagram as photo album, TikTok as distraction engine. Growth appeared inexorable. But now, the model is splintering, and users are drifting toward smaller, slower, more private spaces, like group chats, Discord servers and <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theverge.com\/24063290\/fediverse-explained-activitypub-social-media-open-protocol\">federated microblogs<\/a> \u2014 a billion little gardens.<\/p><p>Since Elon Musk\u2019s takeover, X has <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/technology\/2024\/mar\/26\/twitter-usage-in-us-fallen-by-a-fifth-since-elon-musks-takeover\">shed<\/a> at least 15% of its global user base. Meta\u2019s Threads, launched with great fanfare in 2023, saw its number of daily active users collapse within a month, <a href=\"https:\/\/time.com\/6305383\/meta-threads-failing\">falling<\/a> from around 50 million active Android users at launch in July to only 10 million active users the following August. Twitch <a href=\"https:\/\/www.tubefilter.com\/2025\/01\/10\/twitch-lowest-watch-time-streams-charts-top-streamers-december-2024\/\">recorded<\/a> its lowest monthly watch-time in over four years in December 2024, just 1.58\u202fbillion hours, 11% lower than the December average from 2020-23.<\/p><!-- Quote Block Template -->\n\n<figure class=\"quote\">\n\n  <blockquote class=\"quote__container\">\n\n    <div class=\"quote__text\">\n      &#8220;While content proliferates, engagement is evaporating.&#8221;    <\/div>\n\n    \n    <div class=\"quote__social-media\">\n      <div\n        class=\"a2a_kit a2a_kit_size_35 a2a_default_style\"\n        data-a2a-url=\"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/wpm-article\/85146\"\n        data-a2a-title='\"While content proliferates, engagement is evaporating.\"'\n      >\n        <a class=\"a2a_button_facebook\"><\/a>\n        <a class=\"a2a_button_twitter\"><\/a>\n        <a class=\"a2a_button_email\"><\/a>\n      <\/div>\n    <\/div>\n  <\/blockquote>\n<\/figure><p>Even the giants that still command vast audiences are no longer growing exponentially. Many platforms have already died (Vine, Google+, Yik Yak), are functionally dead or zombified (Tumblr, Ello), or have been revived and died again (MySpace, Bebo). Some notable exceptions aside, like Reddit and BlueSky (though it\u2019s still early days for the latter), growth has plateaued across the board. While social media adoption continues to rise overall, it\u2019s no longer explosive. <a href=\"https:\/\/datareportal.com\/reports\/digital-2025-sub-section-state-of-social\">As of early 2025<\/a>, around 5.3\u202fbillion user identities \u2014 roughly 65% of the global population \u2014 are on social platforms, but annual growth has decelerated to just 4-5%, a steep drop from the double-digit surges seen earlier in the 2010s.<\/p><p>Intentional, opt-in micro\u2011communities are rising in their place \u2014 like Patreon collectives and Substack newsletters \u2014&nbsp;where creators chase depth over scale, retention over virality. A writer with 10,000 devoted subscribers can potentially earn more and burn out less than one with a million passive followers on Instagram.&nbsp;<\/p><p>But the old practices are still evident: Substack is full of personal brands announcing their journeys, Discord servers host influencers disguised as community leaders and Patreon bios promise exclusive access that is often just recycled content. Still, something has shifted. These are not mass arenas; they are clubs \u2014 opt-in spaces with boundaries, where people remember who you are. And they are often paywalled, or at least heavily moderated, which at the very least keeps the bots out. What\u2019s being sold is less a product than a sense of proximity, and while the economics may be similar, the affective atmosphere is different, smaller, slower, more reciprocal. In these spaces, creators don\u2019t chase virality; they cultivate trust.<\/p><p>Even the big platforms sense the turning tide. Instagram has begun emphasizing DMs, X is pushing subscriber\u2011only circles and TikTok is experimenting with private communities. Behind these developments is an implicit acknowledgement that the infinite scroll, stuffed with bots and synthetic sludge, is approaching the limit of what humans will tolerate. A lot of people <a href=\"https:\/\/jamescosullivan.substack.com\/p\/we-cant-get-enough-of-the-bullshit\">seem to be fine<\/a> with slop, but as more start to crave authenticity, the platforms will be forced to take note.<\/p><h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"h-from-attention-to-exhaustion\"><strong>From Attention To Exhaustion<\/strong><\/h2><p>The social internet was built on attention, not only the promise to capture yours but the chance for you to capture a slice of everyone else\u2019s. After two decades, the mechanism has inverted, replacing connection with exhaustion. \u201cDopamine detox\u201d and \u201cdigital Sabbath\u201d have entered the mainstream. In the U.S., <a href=\"https:\/\/www.psychiatry.org\/news-room\/news-releases\/more-new-years-mental-health-resolutions\">a significant proportion<\/a> of 18\u2011 to 34\u2011year\u2011olds took deliberate breaks from social media in 2024, citing mental health as the motivation, according to an American Psychiatric Association poll. And yet, time spent on the platforms remains high \u2014 people scroll not because they enjoy it, but because they don\u2019t know how to stop. Self-help influencers now recommend weekly \u201cno-screen Sundays\u201d (yes, the irony). The mark of the hipster is no longer an ill-fitting beanie but an old-school Nokia dumbphone.&nbsp;<\/p><p><a href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/media\/2025\/jul\/05\/cant-pause-internet-social-media-creators-burnout\">Some creators are quitting, too<\/a>. Competing with synthetic performers who never sleep, they find the visibility race not merely tiring but absurd. Why post a selfie when an AI can generate a prettier one? Why craft a thought when ChatGPT can produce one faster?<\/p><p>These are the last days of social media, not because we lack content, but because the attention economy has neared its outer limit \u2014 we have exhausted the capacity to care. There is more to watch, read, click and react to than ever before \u2014 an endless buffet of stimulation. But novelty has become indistinguishable from noise. Every scroll brings more, and each addition subtracts meaning. We are indeed drowning. In this saturation, even the most outrageous or emotive content struggles to provoke more than a blink.<\/p><p>Outrage fatigues. Irony flattens. Virality cannibalizes itself. The feed no longer surprises but sedates, and in that sedation, something quietly breaks, and social media no longer feels like a place to be; it is a surface to skim.&nbsp;<\/p><p>No one is forcing anyone to go on TikTok or to consume the clickbait in their feeds. The content served to us by algorithms is, in effect, a warped mirror, reflecting and distorting our worst impulses. For younger users in particular, their scrolling of social media can <a href=\"https:\/\/www.apa.org\/news\/apa\/2022\/social-media-children-teens\">become compulsive<\/a>, rewarding <a href=\"https:\/\/search.worldcat.org\/en\/title\/1359918931\">their<\/a> developing brains with unpredictable hits of dopamine that keep them glued to their screens.\n          <div class=\"eos-subscribe-push\">\n            \n            <a target=\"https:\/\/shop.noemamag.com\/?utm_source=MiddleCTA&utm_medium=website\" href=\"https:\/\/shop.noemamag.com\/?utm_source=MiddleCTA&utm_medium=website\" data-wpel-link=\"internal\">Read Noema in print.<\/a>\n            \n          <\/div>\n        <\/p><p>Social media platforms have also achieved something more elegant than coercion: They\u2019ve made non-participation a form of self-exile, a luxury available only to those who can afford its costs.<\/p><!-- Quote Block Template -->\n\n<figure class=\"quote\">\n\n  <blockquote class=\"quote__container\">\n\n    <div class=\"quote__text\">\n      &#8220;Why post a selfie when an AI can generate a prettier one? Why craft a thought when ChatGPT can produce one faster?&#8221;    <\/div>\n\n    \n    <div class=\"quote__social-media\">\n      <div\n        class=\"a2a_kit a2a_kit_size_35 a2a_default_style\"\n        data-a2a-url=\"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/wpm-article\/85146\"\n        data-a2a-title='\"Why post a selfie when an AI can generate a prettier one? Why craft a thought when ChatGPT can produce one faster?\"'\n      >\n        <a class=\"a2a_button_facebook\"><\/a>\n        <a class=\"a2a_button_twitter\"><\/a>\n        <a class=\"a2a_button_email\"><\/a>\n      <\/div>\n    <\/div>\n  <\/blockquote>\n<\/figure><p>Our offline reality is irrevocably shaped by our online world: Consider the worker who deletes or was never on LinkedIn, excluding themselves from professional networks that increasingly exist nowhere else; or the small business owner who abandons Instagram, watching customers drift toward competitors who maintain their social media presence. The teenager who refuses TikTok may find herself unable to parse references, memes and microcultures that soon constitute her peers\u2019 vernacular.<\/p><p>These platforms haven\u2019t just captured attention, they\u2019ve enclosed the commons where social, economic and cultural capital are exchanged. But enclosure breeds resistance, and as exhaustion sets in, alternatives begin to emerge.<\/p><h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"h-architectures-of-intention\"><strong>Architectures Of Intention<\/strong><\/h2><p>The successor to mass social media is, as already noted, emerging not as a single platform, but as a scattering of alleyways, salons, encrypted lounges and federated town squares \u2014&nbsp; those little gardens.<\/p><p>Maybe today\u2019s major social media platforms will find new ways to hold the gaze of the masses, or maybe they will continue to decline in relevance, lingering like derelict shopping centers or a dying online game, haunted by bots and the echo of once\u2011human chatter. Occasionally we may wander back, out of habit or nostalgia, or to converse once more as a crowd, among the ruins. But as social media collapses on itself, the future points to a quieter, more fractured, more human web, something that no longer promises to be everything, everywhere, for everyone.<\/p><p>This is a good thing. Group chats and invite\u2011only circles are where context and connection survive. These are spaces defined less by scale than by shared understanding, where people no longer perform for an algorithmic audience but speak in the presence of chosen others. Messaging apps like Signal are quietly <a href=\"https:\/\/dig.watch\/updates\/messaging-app-signal-sees-rising-popularity-in-us-and-europe\">becoming dominant<\/a> infrastructures for digital social life, not because they promise discovery, but because they don\u2019t. In these spaces, a message often carries more meaning because it is usually directed, not broadcast.<\/p><p>Social media\u2019s current logic is designed to reduce friction, to give users infinite content for instant gratification, or at the very least, the anticipation of such. The antidote to this compulsive, numbing overload will be found in <em>deliberative<\/em> friction, design patterns that introduce pause and reflection into digital interaction, or platforms and algorithms that create space for intention.<\/p><p>This isn\u2019t about making platforms needlessly cumbersome but about distinguishing between helpful constraints and extractive ones. Consider <a href=\"https:\/\/www.are.na\/\">Are.na<\/a>, a non-profit, ad-free creative platform founded in 2014 for collecting and connecting ideas that feels like the anti-Pinterest: There\u2019s no algorithmic feed or engagement metrics, no trending tab to fall into and no infinite scroll. The pace is glacial by social media standards. Connections between ideas must be made manually, and thus, thoughtfully \u2014 there are no algorithmic suggestions or ranked content.<\/p><p>To demand intention over passive, mindless screen time, X could require a 90-second delay before posting replies, not to deter participation, but to curb reactive broadcasting and engagement farming. Instagram could show how long you\u2019ve spent scrolling before allowing uploads of posts or stories, and Facebook could display the carbon cost of its data centers, reminding users that digital actions have material consequences, with each refresh. These small added moments of friction and purposeful interruptions \u2014 what UX designers currently optimize away \u2014 are precisely what we need to break the cycle of passive consumption and restore intention to digital interaction.<\/p><p>We can dream of a digital future where belonging is no longer measured by follower counts or engagement rates, but rather by the development of trust and the quality of conversation. We can dream of a digital future in which communities form around shared interests and mutual care rather than algorithmic prediction. Our public squares \u2014 the big algorithmic platforms \u2014 will never be cordoned off entirely, but they might sit alongside countless semi\u2011public parlors where people choose their company and set their own rules, spaces that prioritize continuity over reach and coherence over chaos. People will show up not to go viral, but to be seen in context. None of this is about escaping the social internet, but about reclaiming its scale, pace, and purpose.<\/p><h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"h-governance-scaffolding\"><strong>Governance Scaffolding<\/strong><\/h2><p>The most radical redesign of social media might be the most familiar: What if we treated these platforms as <a href=\"https:\/\/www.brookings.edu\/articles\/utilities-for-democracy-why-and-how-the-algorithmic-infrastructure-of-facebook-and-google-must-be-regulated\/\">public utilities<\/a> rather than private casinos?<\/p><p>A public-service model wouldn\u2019t require state control; rather, it could be governed through civic charters, much like public broadcasters operate under mandates that balance independence and accountability. This vision stands in stark contrast to the current direction of most major platforms, which are becoming increasingly opaque.<\/p><!-- Quote Block Template -->\n\n<figure class=\"quote\">\n\n  <blockquote class=\"quote__container\">\n\n    <div class=\"quote__text\">\n      &#8220;Non-participation [is] a form of self-exile, a luxury available only to those who can afford its costs.&#8221;    <\/div>\n\n    \n    <div class=\"quote__social-media\">\n      <div\n        class=\"a2a_kit a2a_kit_size_35 a2a_default_style\"\n        data-a2a-url=\"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/wpm-article\/85146\"\n        data-a2a-title='\"Non-participation [is] a form of self-exile, a luxury available only to those who can afford its costs.\"'\n      >\n        <a class=\"a2a_button_facebook\"><\/a>\n        <a class=\"a2a_button_twitter\"><\/a>\n        <a class=\"a2a_button_email\"><\/a>\n      <\/div>\n    <\/div>\n  <\/blockquote>\n<\/figure><p>In recent years, Reddit and X, among other platforms, have either restricted or removed API access, dismantling open-data pathways. The very infrastructures that shape public discourse are retreating from public access and oversight. Imagine social media platforms with transparent algorithms subject to public audit, user representation on governance boards, revenue models based on public funding or member dues rather than surveillance advertising, mandates to serve democratic discourse rather than maximize engagement, and regular impact assessments that measure not just usage but societal effects.<\/p><p>Some initiatives gesture in this direction. Meta\u2019s Oversight Board, for example, frames itself as an independent body for content moderation appeals, though its remit is narrow and its influence ultimately limited by Meta\u2019s discretion. X\u2019s Community Notes, meanwhile, allows user-generated fact-checks but relies on opaque scoring mechanisms and lacks formal accountability. Both are add-ons to existing platform logic rather than systemic redesigns. A true public-service model would bake accountability into the platform\u2019s infrastructure, not just bolt it on after the fact.<\/p><p>The European Union has begun exploring this territory through its Digital Markets Act and Digital Services Act, but these laws, enacted in 2022, largely focus on regulating existing platforms rather than imagining new ones. In the United States, efforts are more fragmented. Proposals such as the Platform Accountability and Transparency Act (PATA) and state-level laws in California and New York aim to increase oversight of algorithmic systems, particularly where they impact youth and mental health. Still, most of these measures seek to retrofit accountability onto current platforms. What we need are spaces built from the ground up on different principles, where incentives align with human interest rather than extractive, for-profit ends.<\/p><p>This could take multiple forms, like municipal platforms for local civic engagement, professionally focused networks run by trade associations, and educational spaces managed by public library systems. The key is diversity, delivering an ecosystem of civic digital spaces that each serve specific communities with transparent governance.<\/p><p>Of course, publicly governed platforms aren\u2019t immune to their own risks. State involvement can bring with it the threat of politicization, censorship or propaganda, and this is why the governance question must be treated as infrastructural, rather than simply institutional. Just as public broadcasters in many democracies operate under charters that insulate them from partisan interference, civic digital spaces would require independent oversight, clear ethical mandates, and democratically accountable governance boards, not centralized state control. The goal is not to build a digital ministry of truth, but to create pluralistic public utilities: platforms built for communities, governed by communities and held to standards of transparency, rights protection and civic purpose.<\/p><p>The technical architecture of the next social web is already emerging through federated and distributed protocols like ActivityPub (used by Mastodon and Threads) and Bluesky\u2019s <a href=\"https:\/\/docs.bsky.app\/docs\/advanced-guides\/atproto\">Authenticated Transfer (AT) Protocol<\/a>, or atproto, (a decentralised framework that allows users to move between platforms while keeping their identity and social graph) as well as various blockchain-based experiments, <a href=\"https:\/\/lens.xyz\/\">like Lens<\/a> and <a href=\"https:\/\/docs.farcaster.xyz\/\">Farcaster<\/a>.<\/p><p>But protocols alone won\u2019t save us. The email protocol is decentralized, yet most email flows through a handful of corporate providers. We need to \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/we-need-to-rewild-the-internet\/\">rewild the internet<\/a>,\u201d as Maria Farrell and Robin Berjon mentioned in a Noema essay. We need governance scaffolding, shared institutions that make decentralization viable at scale. Think credit unions for the social web that function as member-owned entities providing the infrastructure that individual users can\u2019t maintain alone. These could offer shared moderation services that smaller instances can subscribe to, universally portable identity systems that let users move between platforms without losing their history, collective bargaining power for algorithm transparency and data rights, user data dividends for all, not just influencers (if platforms profit from our data, we should share in those profits), and algorithm choice interfaces that let users select from different recommender systems.&nbsp;<\/p><p>Bluesky\u2019s AT Protocol explicitly allows users to port identity and social graphs, but it\u2019s very early days and cross-protocol and platform portability remains extremely limited, if not effectively non-existent. Bluesky also allows users to choose among multiple content algorithms, an important step toward user control. But these models remain largely tied to individual platforms and developer communities. What\u2019s still missing is a civic architecture that makes algorithmic choice universal, portable, auditable and grounded in public-interest governance rather than market dynamics alone.<\/p><p>Imagine being able to toggle between different ranking logics: a chronological feed, where posts appear in real time; a mutuals-first algorithm that privileges content from people who follow you back; a local context filter that surfaces posts from your geographic region or language group; a serendipity engine designed to introduce you to unfamiliar but diverse content; or even a human-curated layer, like playlists or editorials built by trusted institutions or communities. Many of these recommender models do exist, but they are rarely user-selectable, and almost never transparent or accountable. Algorithm choice shouldn\u2019t require a hack or browser extension; it should be built into the architecture as a civic right, not a hidden setting.<\/p><!-- Quote Block Template -->\n\n<figure class=\"quote\">\n\n  <blockquote class=\"quote__container\">\n\n    <div class=\"quote__text\">\n      &#8220;What if we treated these platforms as public utilities rather than private casinos?&#8221;    <\/div>\n\n    \n    <div class=\"quote__social-media\">\n      <div\n        class=\"a2a_kit a2a_kit_size_35 a2a_default_style\"\n        data-a2a-url=\"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/wpm-article\/85146\"\n        data-a2a-title='\"What if we treated these platforms as public utilities rather than private casinos?\"'\n      >\n        <a class=\"a2a_button_facebook\"><\/a>\n        <a class=\"a2a_button_twitter\"><\/a>\n        <a class=\"a2a_button_email\"><\/a>\n      <\/div>\n    <\/div>\n  <\/blockquote>\n<\/figure><p>Algorithmic choice can also develop new hierarchies. If feeds can be curated like playlists, the next influencer may not be the one creating content, but editing it. Institutions, celebrities and brands will be best positioned to build and promote their own recommendation systems. For individuals, the incentive to do this curatorial work will likely depend on reputation, relational capital or ideological investment. Unless we design these systems with care, we risk reproducing old dynamics of platform power, just in a new form.<\/p><p>Federated platforms like Mastodon and Bluesky face <a href=\"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/the-great-decentralization\/\">real tensions<\/a> between autonomy and safety: Without centralized moderation, harmful content can proliferate, while over-reliance on volunteer admins creates sustainability problems at scale. These networks also risk reinforcing ideological silos, as communities block or mute one another, fragmenting the very idea of a shared public square. Decentralization gives users more control, but it also raises difficult questions about governance, cohesion and collective responsibility \u2014 questions that any humane digital future will have to answer.<\/p><p>But there is a possible future where a user, upon opening an app, is asked how they would like to see the world on a given day. They might choose the serendipity engine for unexpected connections, the focus filter for deep reads or the local lens for community news. This is technically very achievable \u2014 the data would be the same; the algorithms would just need to be slightly tweaked \u2014 but it would require a design philosophy that treats users as citizens of a shared digital system rather than cattle. While this is possible, it can feel like a pipe dream.&nbsp;<\/p><p>To make algorithmic choice more than a thought experiment, we need to change the incentives that govern platform design. Regulation can help, but real change will come when platforms are rewarded for serving the public interest. This could mean tying tax breaks or public procurement eligibility to the implementation of transparent, user-controllable algorithms. It could mean funding research into alternative recommender systems and making those tools open-source and interoperable. Most radically, it could involve certifying platforms based on civic impact, rewarding those that prioritize user autonomy and trust over sheer engagement.<\/p><h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"h-digital-literacy-as-public-health\"><strong>Digital Literacy As Public Health<\/strong><\/h2><p>Perhaps most crucially, we need to reframe digital literacy not as an individual responsibility but as a collective capacity. This means moving beyond spot-the-fake-news workshops to more fundamental efforts to understand how algorithms shape perception and how design patterns exploit our cognitive processes.&nbsp;<\/p><p>Some education systems are <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2022\/09\/08\/technology\/misinformation-students-media-literacy.html\">beginning to respond<\/a>, embedding digital and media literacy across curricula. Researchers and educators argue that this work needs to begin in early childhood and continue through secondary education as a core competency. The goal is to equip students to critically examine the digital environments they inhabit daily, to <a href=\"https:\/\/www.sciencedirect.com\/science\/article\/pii\/S2212868924000667\">become active<\/a> participants in shaping the future of digital culture rather than passive consumers. This includes what some call <em>algorithmic literacy<\/em>, the ability to understand how recommender systems work, how content is ranked and surfaced, and how personal data is used to shape what you see \u2014 and what you don\u2019t.<\/p><p>Teaching this at scale would mean treating digital literacy as public infrastructure, not just a skill set for individuals, but a form of shared civic defense. This would involve long-term investments in teacher training, curriculum design and support for public institutions, such as libraries and schools, to serve as digital literacy hubs. When we build collective capacity, we begin to lay the foundations for a digital culture grounded in understanding, context and care.<\/p><p>We also need behavioral safeguards like default privacy settings that protect rather than expose, mandatory cooling-off periods for viral content (deliberately slowing the spread of posts that suddenly attract high engagement), algorithmic impact assessments before major platform changes and public dashboards that show platform manipulation, that is, coordinated or deceptive behaviors that distort how content is amplified or suppressed, in real-time. If platforms are forced to disclose their engagement tactics, these tactics lose power. The ambition is to make visible hugely influential systems that currently operate in obscurity.<\/p><p>We need to build new digital spaces grounded in different principles, but this isn\u2019t an either-or proposition. We also must reckon with the scale and entrenchment of existing platforms that still structure much of public life. Reforming them matters too. Systemic safeguards may not address the core incentives that inform platform design, but they can mitigate harm in the short term. The work, then, is to constrain the damage of the current system while constructing better ones in parallel, to contain what we have, even as we create what we need.&nbsp;<\/p><p>The choice isn\u2019t between technological determinism and Luddite retreat; it\u2019s about constructing alternatives that learn from what made major platforms usable and compelling while rejecting the extractive mechanics that turned those features into tools for exploitation. This won\u2019t happen through individual choice, though choice helps; it also won\u2019t happen through regulation, though regulation can really help. It will require our collective imagination to envision and build systems focused on serving human flourishing rather than harvesting human attention.<\/p><p>Social media as we know it is dying, but we\u2019re not condemned to its ruins. We are capable of building better \u2014 smaller, slower, more intentional, more accountable \u2014 spaces for digital interaction, spaces where the metrics that matter aren\u2019t engagement and growth but understanding and connection, where algorithms serve the community rather than strip-mining it.<\/p><p>The last days of social media might be the first days of something more human: a web that remembers why we came online in the first place \u2014 not to be harvested but to be heard, not to go viral but to find our people, not to scroll but to connect. We built these systems, and we can certainly build better ones. The question is whether we will do this or whether we will continue to drown.<\/p>\n          <div class=\"eos-subscribe-push\">\n          \n            <a target=\"https:\/\/shop.noemamag.com\/?utm_source=BottomCTA&utm_medium=website\" href=\"https:\/\/shop.noemamag.com\/?utm_source=BottomCTA&utm_medium=website\" data-wpel-link=\"internal\">Enjoy the read? Subscribe to get the best of Noema.<\/a>\n            \n          <\/div>\n        ","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"","protected":false},"author":7165,"featured_media":85147,"template":"","wpm-article-type":[3],"wpm-article-topic":[21,23,20],"wpm-article-tag":[],"class_list":["post-85146","wpm-article","type-wpm-article","status-publish","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","wpm-article-type-essay","wpm-article-topic-digital-society","wpm-article-topic-philosophy-culture","wpm-article-topic-technology-and-the-human"],"acf":[],"apple_news_notices":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v25.0 (Yoast SEO v25.0) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>The Last Days Of Social Media<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"Social media promised connection, but it has delivered exhaustion.\" \/>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/the-last-days-of-social-media\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"The Last Days Of Social Media\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Social media promised connection, but it has delivered exhaustion.\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:url\" content=\"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/the-last-days-of-social-media\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:site_name\" content=\"NOEMA\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:publisher\" content=\"https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/NoemaMag\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:modified_time\" content=\"2025-09-02T17:40:21+00:00\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:image\" content=\"https:\/\/noemamag.imgix.net\/2025\/08\/osullivanfinal.jpg?fm=pjpg&ixlib=php-3.3.1&s=ece62434f3f46ad3164625eab3746778\" \/>\n\t<meta property=\"og:image:width\" content=\"947\" \/>\n\t<meta property=\"og:image:height\" content=\"1186\" \/>\n\t<meta property=\"og:image:type\" content=\"image\/jpeg\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:card\" content=\"summary_large_image\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:image\" content=\"https:\/\/noemamag.imgix.net\/2025\/09\/Noema-Twitter-Card-Vertical-Template-2025-09-02T100548.254.png?fm=png&ixlib=php-3.3.1&s=3655cc063f23237da6c389de4c737035\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:site\" content=\"@NoemaMag\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:label1\" content=\"Est. reading time\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:data1\" content=\"22 minutes\" \/>\n<script type=\"application\/ld+json\" class=\"yoast-schema-graph\">{\"@context\":\"https:\/\/schema.org\",\"@graph\":[{\"@type\":\"WebPage\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/the-last-days-of-social-media\/\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/the-last-days-of-social-media\/\",\"name\":\"The Last Days Of Social Media\",\"isPartOf\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/#website\"},\"primaryImageOfPage\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/the-last-days-of-social-media\/#primaryimage\"},\"image\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/the-last-days-of-social-media\/#primaryimage\"},\"thumbnailUrl\":\"https:\/\/noemamag.imgix.net\/2025\/08\/osullivanfinal.jpg?fm=pjpg&ixlib=php-3.3.1&s=ece62434f3f46ad3164625eab3746778\",\"datePublished\":\"2025-09-02T14:55:48+00:00\",\"dateModified\":\"2025-09-02T17:40:21+00:00\",\"description\":\"Social media promised connection, but it has delivered exhaustion.\",\"breadcrumb\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/the-last-days-of-social-media\/#breadcrumb\"},\"inLanguage\":\"en-US\",\"potentialAction\":[{\"@type\":\"ReadAction\",\"target\":[\"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/the-last-days-of-social-media\/\"]}]},{\"@type\":\"ImageObject\",\"inLanguage\":\"en-US\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/the-last-days-of-social-media\/#primaryimage\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/noemamag.imgix.net\/2025\/08\/osullivanfinal.jpg?fm=pjpg&ixlib=php-3.3.1&s=ece62434f3f46ad3164625eab3746778\",\"contentUrl\":\"https:\/\/noemamag.imgix.net\/2025\/08\/osullivanfinal.jpg?fm=pjpg&ixlib=php-3.3.1&s=ece62434f3f46ad3164625eab3746778\",\"width\":947,\"height\":1186,\"caption\":\"Daniel Barreto\"},{\"@type\":\"BreadcrumbList\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/the-last-days-of-social-media\/#breadcrumb\",\"itemListElement\":[{\"@type\":\"ListItem\",\"position\":1,\"name\":\"Home\",\"item\":\"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/\"},{\"@type\":\"ListItem\",\"position\":2,\"name\":\"The Last Days Of Social Media\"}]},{\"@type\":\"WebSite\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/#website\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/\",\"name\":\"NOEMA\",\"description\":\"Noema Magazine\",\"publisher\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/#organization\"},\"potentialAction\":[{\"@type\":\"SearchAction\",\"target\":{\"@type\":\"EntryPoint\",\"urlTemplate\":\"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/?s={search_term_string}\"},\"query-input\":{\"@type\":\"PropertyValueSpecification\",\"valueRequired\":true,\"valueName\":\"search_term_string\"}}],\"inLanguage\":\"en-US\"},{\"@type\":\"Organization\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/#organization\",\"name\":\"NOEMA\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/\",\"logo\":{\"@type\":\"ImageObject\",\"inLanguage\":\"en-US\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/#\/schema\/logo\/image\/\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/noemamag.imgix.net\/2023\/11\/noema-logo.png?fm=png&ixlib=php-3.3.1&s=5f5be9b261a7cf7e336f6f6beea6e539\",\"contentUrl\":\"https:\/\/noemamag.imgix.net\/2023\/11\/noema-logo.png?fm=png&ixlib=php-3.3.1&s=5f5be9b261a7cf7e336f6f6beea6e539\",\"width\":305,\"height\":69,\"caption\":\"NOEMA\"},\"image\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/#\/schema\/logo\/image\/\"},\"sameAs\":[\"https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/NoemaMag\",\"https:\/\/x.com\/NoemaMag\"]}]}<\/script>\n<!-- \/ Yoast SEO Premium plugin. -->","yoast_head_json":{"title":"The Last Days Of Social Media","description":"Social media promised connection, but it has delivered exhaustion.","robots":{"index":"index","follow":"follow","max-snippet":"max-snippet:-1","max-image-preview":"max-image-preview:large","max-video-preview":"max-video-preview:-1"},"canonical":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/the-last-days-of-social-media\/","og_locale":"en_US","og_type":"article","og_title":"The Last Days Of Social Media","og_description":"Social media promised connection, but it has delivered exhaustion.","og_url":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/the-last-days-of-social-media\/","og_site_name":"NOEMA","article_publisher":"https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/NoemaMag","article_modified_time":"2025-09-02T17:40:21+00:00","og_image":[{"width":947,"height":1186,"url":"https:\/\/noemamag.imgix.net\/2025\/08\/osullivanfinal.jpg?fm=pjpg&ixlib=php-3.3.1&s=ece62434f3f46ad3164625eab3746778","type":"image\/jpeg"}],"twitter_card":"summary_large_image","twitter_image":"https:\/\/noemamag.imgix.net\/2025\/09\/Noema-Twitter-Card-Vertical-Template-2025-09-02T100548.254.png?fm=png&ixlib=php-3.3.1&s=3655cc063f23237da6c389de4c737035","twitter_site":"@NoemaMag","twitter_misc":{"Est. reading time":"22 minutes"},"schema":{"@context":"https:\/\/schema.org","@graph":[{"@type":"WebPage","@id":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/the-last-days-of-social-media\/","url":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/the-last-days-of-social-media\/","name":"The Last Days Of Social Media","isPartOf":{"@id":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/#website"},"primaryImageOfPage":{"@id":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/the-last-days-of-social-media\/#primaryimage"},"image":{"@id":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/the-last-days-of-social-media\/#primaryimage"},"thumbnailUrl":"https:\/\/noemamag.imgix.net\/2025\/08\/osullivanfinal.jpg?fm=pjpg&ixlib=php-3.3.1&s=ece62434f3f46ad3164625eab3746778","datePublished":"2025-09-02T14:55:48+00:00","dateModified":"2025-09-02T17:40:21+00:00","description":"Social media promised connection, but it has delivered exhaustion.","breadcrumb":{"@id":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/the-last-days-of-social-media\/#breadcrumb"},"inLanguage":"en-US","potentialAction":[{"@type":"ReadAction","target":["https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/the-last-days-of-social-media\/"]}]},{"@type":"ImageObject","inLanguage":"en-US","@id":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/the-last-days-of-social-media\/#primaryimage","url":"https:\/\/noemamag.imgix.net\/2025\/08\/osullivanfinal.jpg?fm=pjpg&ixlib=php-3.3.1&s=ece62434f3f46ad3164625eab3746778","contentUrl":"https:\/\/noemamag.imgix.net\/2025\/08\/osullivanfinal.jpg?fm=pjpg&ixlib=php-3.3.1&s=ece62434f3f46ad3164625eab3746778","width":947,"height":1186,"caption":"Daniel Barreto"},{"@type":"BreadcrumbList","@id":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/the-last-days-of-social-media\/#breadcrumb","itemListElement":[{"@type":"ListItem","position":1,"name":"Home","item":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/"},{"@type":"ListItem","position":2,"name":"The Last Days Of Social Media"}]},{"@type":"WebSite","@id":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/#website","url":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/","name":"NOEMA","description":"Noema Magazine","publisher":{"@id":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/#organization"},"potentialAction":[{"@type":"SearchAction","target":{"@type":"EntryPoint","urlTemplate":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/?s={search_term_string}"},"query-input":{"@type":"PropertyValueSpecification","valueRequired":true,"valueName":"search_term_string"}}],"inLanguage":"en-US"},{"@type":"Organization","@id":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/#organization","name":"NOEMA","url":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","inLanguage":"en-US","@id":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/#\/schema\/logo\/image\/","url":"https:\/\/noemamag.imgix.net\/2023\/11\/noema-logo.png?fm=png&ixlib=php-3.3.1&s=5f5be9b261a7cf7e336f6f6beea6e539","contentUrl":"https:\/\/noemamag.imgix.net\/2023\/11\/noema-logo.png?fm=png&ixlib=php-3.3.1&s=5f5be9b261a7cf7e336f6f6beea6e539","width":305,"height":69,"caption":"NOEMA"},"image":{"@id":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/#\/schema\/logo\/image\/"},"sameAs":["https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/NoemaMag","https:\/\/x.com\/NoemaMag"]}]}},"parsely":{"version":"1.1.0","canonical_url":"https:\/\/noemamag.com\/the-last-days-of-social-media","smart_links":{"inbound":0,"outbound":0},"traffic_boost_suggestions_count":0,"meta":{"@context":"https:\/\/schema.org","@type":"NewsArticle","headline":"The Last Days Of Social Media","url":"http:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/the-last-days-of-social-media","mainEntityOfPage":{"@type":"WebPage","@id":"http:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/the-last-days-of-social-media"},"thumbnailUrl":"https:\/\/noemamag.imgix.net\/2025\/08\/osullivanfinal.jpg?fit=crop&fm=pjpg&h=150&ixlib=php-3.3.1&w=150&wpsize=thumbnail&s=e985e0c2bb08c001fc02d440893b8c56","image":{"@type":"ImageObject","url":"https:\/\/noemamag.imgix.net\/2025\/08\/osullivanfinal.jpg?fm=pjpg&ixlib=php-3.3.1&s=ece62434f3f46ad3164625eab3746778"},"articleSection":"Uncategorized","author":[{"@type":"Person","name":"James O'Sullivan"}],"creator":["James O'Sullivan"],"publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"NOEMA","logo":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/06\/cropped-ms-icon-310x310-1.png"},"keywords":[],"dateCreated":"2025-09-02T14:55:48Z","datePublished":"2025-09-02T14:55:48Z","dateModified":"2025-09-02T17:40:21Z"},"rendered":"<script type=\"application\/ld+json\" class=\"wp-parsely-metadata\">{\"@context\":\"https:\\\/\\\/schema.org\",\"@type\":\"NewsArticle\",\"headline\":\"The Last Days Of Social Media\",\"url\":\"http:\\\/\\\/www.noemamag.com\\\/the-last-days-of-social-media\",\"mainEntityOfPage\":{\"@type\":\"WebPage\",\"@id\":\"http:\\\/\\\/www.noemamag.com\\\/the-last-days-of-social-media\"},\"thumbnailUrl\":\"https:\\\/\\\/noemamag.imgix.net\\\/2025\\\/08\\\/osullivanfinal.jpg?fit=crop&fm=pjpg&h=150&ixlib=php-3.3.1&w=150&wpsize=thumbnail&s=e985e0c2bb08c001fc02d440893b8c56\",\"image\":{\"@type\":\"ImageObject\",\"url\":\"https:\\\/\\\/noemamag.imgix.net\\\/2025\\\/08\\\/osullivanfinal.jpg?fm=pjpg&ixlib=php-3.3.1&s=ece62434f3f46ad3164625eab3746778\"},\"articleSection\":\"Uncategorized\",\"author\":[{\"@type\":\"Person\",\"name\":\"James O'Sullivan\"}],\"creator\":[\"James O'Sullivan\"],\"publisher\":{\"@type\":\"Organization\",\"name\":\"NOEMA\",\"logo\":\"https:\\\/\\\/www.noemamag.com\\\/wp-content\\\/uploads\\\/2020\\\/06\\\/cropped-ms-icon-310x310-1.png\"},\"keywords\":[],\"dateCreated\":\"2025-09-02T14:55:48Z\",\"datePublished\":\"2025-09-02T14:55:48Z\",\"dateModified\":\"2025-09-02T17:40:21Z\"}<\/script>","tracker_url":"https:\/\/cdn.parsely.com\/keys\/noemamag.com\/p.js"},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/wpm-article\/85146","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/wpm-article"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/wpm-article"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/7165"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/85147"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=85146"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"wpm-article-type","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/wpm-article-type?post=85146"},{"taxonomy":"wpm-article-topic","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/wpm-article-topic?post=85146"},{"taxonomy":"wpm-article-tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.noemamag.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/wpm-article-tag?post=85146"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}