Joining a new social network in 2024 is an odd, lonely, quiet experience. By now, most social networkers have established communities online. But if those communities were on Twitter (now known as X), they may have died off.
We follow, and are followed by, a relatively large number of people on Facebook and LinkedIn. Your followers may be true friends, business colleagues, family members, fans, and other constituents.
Also: 5 reasons to try Twitter rival Bluesky (no invite needed)
Over on X, things have gotten a lot more fraught since the presidential election. Because X’s current owner has close ties to one of the sides in America’s rather boisterous political debate, folks aligned with the other side have started to bail, mostly for Bluesky. Bluesky has seen 500% growth since the election.
I haven’t left X, and have no immediate intention to do so. Unlike many of my friends and colleagues, who complain about the large flow of political content on X, I haven’t seen it. I’ve been careful about who I connect with on my socials, and long ago unfriended those who spew political diatribe. Of course, I also maintain an active presence on Bluesky and all the other socials, which we’ll discuss throughout this article.
Also: How to migrate from X to Bluesky without losing your followers
When you join a new social network, you’re starting afresh. Yes, a few of your friends might have invited you to join, so you might have a core group you’re still familiar with, but it’s still quiet.
I used to have regular dialogs with my many Twitter followers. I still have a large followership, but there’s no dialog. Unlike when it was Twitter, X is very much of a ghost town in terms of good conversation about tech issues. That conversation hasn’t moved to the other services. It’s just shut down. I miss that conversation.
I’m also disturbed by how some social networks seem to have developed political identities, with more users of one affiliation gravitating to one network or the other.
Over the past year, I have dabbled in Bluesky, Threads, and T2, which became Pebble, which then died. I also joined Mastodon, which is more of a decentralized social network. None of them have achieved anything resembling the level of vibrancy of Twitter before it was nuked.
Also: How to use Bluesky Social: Everything to know about the popular X alternative
Although your mileage may vary, I’ve found that Facebook and LinkedIn seem to have maintained a bit more of an interactive community, especially within individual Facebook groups. However, neither of these networks seems to have the immediacy and global connection that Twitter (when it was Twitter) once had.
Instagram is still Instagram, but it’s not really a text-oriented social network, so, like YouTube and TikTok, I’m not including it in this article’s discussion. I’ve started seeing more and more activity on my YouTube channel, but that’s almost entirely about my project work.
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The Bluesky community
I joined Bluesky when I got an invite from one of my tech press colleagues. I knew about 20 other people on Bluesky, also in the tech press, so I followed them. A few of them followed me back. Bluesky is no longer invitation-only. My followership stayed quite low for a while, but recently started to increase – probably due to the Twitter exodus.