Rich and Paul discuss how new tech like Threads offers humans a fresh start. However, human beings fundamentally don't want to change, and we run into issues because we don't move as fast as our technology does - however we know of a fast growing yet intuitive technology - our sponsor Aboard.
Hey Paul,
Paul Ford:Hey Rich, how you doing?
Rich Ziade:I'm doing well.
Rich Ziade:How are you doing?
Paul Ford:I'm doing fine.
Paul Ford:I'm still a little sniffly, but my energy's back.
Paul Ford:So you're going to hear an energetic sniffly guy on this podcast.
Rich Ziade:You sound a little better.
Paul Ford:I'm doing all right.
Paul Ford:I'm on penicillin.
Rich Ziade:better.
Paul Ford:Life is good.
Paul Ford:Life
Rich Ziade:Good.
Rich Ziade:Um, so, guess what I'm not?
Paul Ford:What are you?
Rich Ziade:Don't do it.
Paul Ford:Oh man, oh, it's a
Rich Ziade:Don't do it.
Rich Ziade:I'm not addicted or opening the app Threads.
Paul Ford:oh God.
Paul Ford:Tell the people what Threads was.
Rich Ziade:Okay, was.
Rich Ziade:You, it sounds like it belongs in history books at this point.
Paul Ford:Yeah.
Rich Ziade:I knew And I think I tweeted it out just so I could say see I told
Rich Ziade:you so I knew that when it came out And it was good like Threads was solid.
Rich Ziade:It's scaled.
Rich Ziade:It was fast.
Paul Ford:Alright, so wait, wait, wait.
Paul Ford:Hold on, because people will be listening to this, like, they might be
Paul Ford:listening to this in September 2023, and no one will know what Threads was.
Paul Ford:So, tell them.
Rich Ziade:Just three weeks from now Threads was essentially a Twitter clone
Rich Ziade:in effect a Twitter clone made by Meta Facebook's parent company Because they saw
Rich Ziade:that Twitter was kind of Skidding into.
Rich Ziade:Um, this terrible sort of pit of shit, and so they're like, you know what,
Rich Ziade:we have a giant audience, as in like a third of the earth, uh, why don't
Rich Ziade:we come up with a Twitter clone?
Rich Ziade:So they came up with something called Threads, I think it's by the Instagram
Rich Ziade:team, I think it's more as closely associated with the Instagram team,
Rich Ziade:and you know, they had the users.
Rich Ziade:So it was very easy for you to just log in with your Instagram account or Facebook
Rich Ziade:account or however way they were doing it.
Rich Ziade:And within like...
Rich Ziade:A day, they had 50 million users, or some ridiculous number, right?
Rich Ziade:And then everyone was like, man, it is pleasant over there.
Rich Ziade:It is just nice.
Rich Ziade:Nobody's yelling at anyone.
Rich Ziade:I just saw that Miley Cyrus jumped on.
Rich Ziade:It's gonna be great.
Rich Ziade:And that's the end of Twitter.
Rich Ziade:And this has happened like four times.
Rich Ziade:Uh.
Rich Ziade:Mastodon showed up and it's like well guess what we got
Rich Ziade:right here There is no Yeah,
Paul Ford:hold on.
Paul Ford:This one is a little different.
Paul Ford:Like, Macedon is, Hey, you know what?
Paul Ford:There's this federated, non controlled Build it yourself network of Twitter like
Paul Ford:experiences over here in the Fediverse.
Rich Ziade:had been around prior to all the like Twitter melting.
Paul Ford:And so people were like, well, I guess, you know, I'm
Paul Ford:looking for something different.
Paul Ford:I'll give that a go.
Paul Ford:But I mean, let's be real.
Paul Ford:Like the Fediverse adoption curve is just always going to be slower because
Paul Ford:it's dirtier and it's not, doesn't have one nice central app and you
Paul Ford:got to set up an account on a server.
Paul Ford:And so like there, so Mastodon is its own thing, but yeah, there's
Paul Ford:BlueSky, which is just a Twitter clone.
Paul Ford:You know, it's, I think it has
Rich Ziade:x Twitter people
Paul Ford:has like a kind of crypto ass, but they're always, you know, there's
Paul Ford:like, they're always trying to add
Rich Ziade:There's always an angle.
Rich Ziade:Yeah, there's this one called post which raised a bunch of money
Rich Ziade:Which is another Twitter clone, but everybody has their little twist on
Paul Ford:well, threads was
Rich Ziade:a bug
Paul Ford:because it's like Mark Zuckerberg and it was naked.
Paul Ford:It was just like, yeah, this is our Twitter.
Paul Ford:We're not going to worry about that.
Paul Ford:And then they put, it got like 150 billion users in like a
Paul Ford:minute, which is essentially half of Twitter's active user base.
Paul Ford:Like, it's a
Rich Ziade:yeah, yeah.
Rich Ziade:But a tenth of Facebook's user base
Paul Ford:Correct.
Paul Ford:Correct.
Rich Ziade:or something like that.
Rich Ziade:Yeah.
Rich Ziade:And, and, and I knew, I knew that it was going to fade off and, and it led me
Rich Ziade:to think about Other bad relationships in my life, and I don't mean by bad
Rich Ziade:relationships as in other people, but you have, we have relationships
Rich Ziade:that we know are not healthy.
Rich Ziade:They could be with objects, they could be with nationalities, they could be
Rich Ziade:with religions, um, that we stick to.
Rich Ziade:And I don't think people, people think that it's about a feature set or about
Rich Ziade:starting fresh, but here is the thing.
Rich Ziade:Culture and social dynamics do not migrate.
Paul Ford:No,
Rich Ziade:You can't export that data.
Rich Ziade:They just don't.
Paul Ford:threads had an immediate, like, clearly they were, they were
Paul Ford:seeding it with Instagram influencer types who were like, Oh man, is this
Paul Ford:my favorite new social network or what?
Paul Ford:You know, there's a lot of that kind of content.
Paul Ford:And, uh, that was a rough go.
Paul Ford:You get in there, you're like, Oh, all right.
Paul Ford:And then.
Paul Ford:All the regular people show up.
Paul Ford:People like me.
Rich Ziade:yeah,
Paul Ford:you know, I just don't have an Imbi anymore.
Paul Ford:I don't think anybody does.
Paul Ford:We're just like, oh god, remember how the last one turned out?
Paul Ford:Why will this be better?
Paul Ford:And there's no answer.
Paul Ford:It's just like, ah, you're going to get to engage with brands.
Paul Ford:Like, we're back to 2006.
Rich Ziade:yeah, and and and I don't I don't think that
Rich Ziade:Anyone wants to start fresh.
Rich Ziade:I don't think anyone does like I think it's I think
Paul Ford:Well, what's the benefit?
Paul Ford:TikTok is like, I'm going to show you a hot girl dancing with a duck.
Paul Ford:And then she'll give you duck farming tips.
Paul Ford:But she'll do a dance.
Paul Ford:And you're like, I've never seen that before.
Rich Ziade:yeah, and
Paul Ford:go ahead.
Rich Ziade:No, no, no, go ahead.
Paul Ford:No, I think, so like, what did Threads have?
Paul Ford:It was like, well, it's another text box, and this one is endorsed by Mark
Paul Ford:Zuckerberg, who, you know, he's doing better lately, but not an unalloyed
Paul Ford:history of successful advocacy for the consumer's interest over his own.
Rich Ziade:correct, correct.
Rich Ziade:Um,
Paul Ford:I want to get back to something you said, though.
Paul Ford:Hold up.
Rich Ziade:yeah,
Paul Ford:Because I think this is important, and I think it's really subtle.
Paul Ford:The great sin on social media that people like to call out over and over and over
Paul Ford:again, and it's sort of like a very...
Paul Ford:Grew up very lefty inside.
Paul Ford:The great sin of progressivism is always hypocrisy.
Paul Ford:You know, like you, you, you are, you're a hypocrite.
Paul Ford:You, you took the money, you got the job and you got the insurance and so on.
Paul Ford:And which is why people, I think often people age out of it because
Paul Ford:they literally are like, Oh my God, I have two kids, right?
Paul Ford:Like you're
Rich Ziade:Yeah, I want a house with a backyard.
Rich Ziade:Yeah.
Paul Ford:I'm going to go for some hypocrisy.
Paul Ford:Certainly I did.
Paul Ford:So, uh, what's real is that.
Paul Ford:Every engagement with a system that's a lot bigger than you
Paul Ford:comes with a hypocrisy tax.
Paul Ford:Every single
Rich Ziade:Mm hmm.
Paul Ford:Most people, I think, on earth, who are not focused on their ideology,
Paul Ford:but just kind of like want to hang out, are utterly happy to pay that tax.
Paul Ford:Could care
Rich Ziade:Oh, totally.
Rich Ziade:Totally.
Rich Ziade:And I think what's interesting is I think when people leave, and you saw this
Rich Ziade:intensely when Musk bought Twitter, and it started, like, the weird changes started
Rich Ziade:to come in, people viewed their exit.
Rich Ziade:As an act of defiance, it's like I'm done here.
Rich Ziade:You can find me on this new address at this new neighborhood That is much
Rich Ziade:nicer and everyone respects each other.
Rich Ziade:Bye and then they leave and then to your point 85% of the people on there
Rich Ziade:are like, well, where's he going?
Rich Ziade:They just go back to what they were doing.
Rich Ziade:Number one.
Rich Ziade:Number two It gets real lonely on the other side there
Rich Ziade:because nobody came with you.
Rich Ziade:You thought you had power there that you were going to, you were
Rich Ziade:going to be the beginning of a migration out, but you didn't.
Paul Ford:Well, the platform has the power.
Paul Ford:I actually think, though...
Paul Ford:I do think Twitter truly is dying.
Paul Ford:I think social media is dying.
Paul Ford:I just don't think like the appetite for it in the culture is, can sustain.
Paul Ford:It was this very new and novel thing.
Paul Ford:It brought everybody together.
Paul Ford:And then I think everybody went, Oh God, no, I'm kind of tired.
Paul Ford:Like, but you saw it in waves.
Paul Ford:Like it's, it's good for updates about grandma's health.
Paul Ford:But it also gets real depressing.
Paul Ford:And like then Twitter, Twitter is now at this point where, yeah, everybody,
Paul Ford:a lot of people did leave, right?
Paul Ford:Like tens of millions have kind of drifted off.
Paul Ford:Most people never posted.
Paul Ford:They just watched.
Paul Ford:And now there was a point a little while ago where it felt like it was
Paul Ford:getting to its true form, was just naked primate screaming, just people
Paul Ford:dunking and just kind of nothing but, but
Rich Ziade:yeah, yeah,
Paul Ford:But even that, everybody gets, humans just get bored.
Paul Ford:I cannot emphasize enough.
Paul Ford:I feel like if I could go back and rebuild my career from first principles.
Paul Ford:I would just build it around the concept of humans having, at most
Paul Ford:collectively, a six month attention span for some new world changing idea.
Rich Ziade:and then then back to the back to the median.
Rich Ziade:Yeah.
Rich Ziade:Yeah Yeah, is that and and and you know when I think about this I think about
Rich Ziade:what we tend to drift back to valuing right which are which are Very relatable,
Rich Ziade:but less interesting and exciting to the rest of the world things, right?
Rich Ziade:And that could be your job, that could be your profession, that could be
Rich Ziade:your research, that could be a hobby.
Rich Ziade:Um, and I think a lot of that happens now further away from these platforms.
Rich Ziade:Because the platforms don't reward it.
Rich Ziade:They just don't reward you having a club, right?
Rich Ziade:They just don't.
Paul Ford:because it's literally like, hey, check out my model train.
Paul Ford:And someone will be like, hey, that model train is, uh, you know,
Paul Ford:the scale model there was used by the Germans to plan war crimes.
Paul Ford:And you'll be like, whoa, you know, I just installed a little horn.
Paul Ford:And they're like, yeah, well, that's...
Paul Ford:You're part of the problem and you just, which like, it could be true.
Paul Ford:That's not true, but it could be true.
Paul Ford:But you're just like, I just want to run my tutu around the track.
Rich Ziade:I think, look, I'm gonna tell you, I hate this phrase.
Rich Ziade:I hate the phrase Town Square.
Paul Ford:Oh yeah, it's a rough one.
Rich Ziade:it.
Rich Ziade:I can't stand it
Paul Ford:a, it is a favorite of the billionaires too.
Paul Ford:Billionaires love a good time.
Paul Ford:This was, I wrote about this.
Paul Ford:I wrote about how it wired the, uh, it wired.
Paul Ford:Uh, cause my, my thesis is that God destroyed Twitter because it became
Paul Ford:too much like the Tower of Babel.
Paul Ford:You just can't get everybody together and then God just occasionally
Paul Ford:comes down and is just like,
Rich Ziade:like, enough.
Paul Ford:You're not doing that!
Paul Ford:Gonna scatter you to all the different lands.
Paul Ford:Uh, Twi A billionaire loves a global town square.
Paul Ford:And I, I think it's because it's a market.
Paul Ford:I think they're like, Aw, you got everybody together.
Paul Ford:Woo!
Paul Ford:Finally, it's gonna be efficient.
Paul Ford:And we can get Bitcoin!
Rich Ziade:And there's also that love.
Rich Ziade:No, no, no.
Rich Ziade:And there's also that love of like, well, at the town square, everyone
Rich Ziade:is free to express themselves.
Rich Ziade:There's that feeling of like just unfettered freedom of
Paul Ford:It's also like these guys, everyone needs to live in New
Paul Ford:York for like a year, especially if they're about to become a billionaire.
Rich Ziade:come to Washington Square
Paul Ford:yeah,
Rich Ziade:for the town square.
Paul Ford:a man is wearing no shirt.
Paul Ford:Like, you know, it's...
Paul Ford:I went out to get dinner and somebody, as I walked out, somebody was just
Paul Ford:like, Your skin is dead white.
Paul Ford:You are the reason that they're, you are the devil.
Paul Ford:You know, I'm just like, cool.
Paul Ford:And it's, you know those guys, they're in Fulton Mall.
Paul Ford:It's totally, like, they've been around.
Paul Ford:They used to be in Times Square.
Paul Ford:They've been around forever.
Paul Ford:That's part of the town square.
Paul Ford:I actually, in a horrible way, I see them with almost affection.
Paul Ford:But, um, but like that's, that's not what they're saying when they say town square.
Rich Ziade:well, I guess there's an optimist look I'll give them one
Rich Ziade:thing about it is I think it's an optimistic view of people to say Oh
Rich Ziade:the town square is a wonderful thing.
Rich Ziade:I think when I think town square I think weirdos
Paul Ford:Yeah.
Rich Ziade:I also think Everyone is talking shit about everyone else in
Rich Ziade:smaller groups in the town square.
Rich Ziade:So I, I, I don't know if it's cynical or it's just realistic.
Rich Ziade:I'm just being realistic about just human nature.
Rich Ziade:And I guess I want to toss the question to you.
Rich Ziade:Is this just, is this just us?
Rich Ziade:Like fundamentally?
Rich Ziade:Come on, Paul, you gotta give us an out here, man.
Paul Ford:no, there is
Rich Ziade:Are we ending this podcast?
Rich Ziade:Is this the end of our advice right at this very moment?
Paul Ford:is, I think I'm going to bring two things back together.
Paul Ford:So what is, I just said, I would love to rebuild my career along the principle
Paul Ford:of just humans getting bored, right?
Rich Ziade:Yeah.
Paul Ford:Human behavior does not fundamentally change.
Paul Ford:It just doesn't.
Paul Ford:We could have another World War II tomorrow.
Paul Ford:We really could.
Paul Ford:We know this.
Paul Ford:And we've taken steps, collectively as a society, for more than 70
Paul Ford:years, because that was so bad we don't want it to happen again.
Paul Ford:So we don't have regular nuclear mis uh, nuclear bomb explosions on Earth.
Paul Ford:Because that's so bad, right?
Rich Ziade:Well, it, we just saw the end game, right?
Rich Ziade:Like, and that was terrifying.
Rich Ziade:And that's, you know, mutual assured destruction.
Rich Ziade:And so we sort of tiptoed back, but we're still, we're like, you know what?
Rich Ziade:But artillery is still cool, right?
Rich Ziade:And so we still have a lot of conventional wars around the world.
Paul Ford:That was very confusing to me as a lesson to read about,
Paul Ford:like, the Geneva Conventions.
Paul Ford:Because I'm like, why don't you just stop it?
Paul Ford:Right, like, why, why do, yeah, right,
Rich Ziade:That's very optimistic.
Paul Ford:15, like, you know, why do
Rich Ziade:Yeah.
Paul Ford:but then what you don't think of as a 15 year old is
Paul Ford:like, what enforcement mechanism will, will stop it, right?
Paul Ford:And so,
Rich Ziade:exactly.
Paul Ford:so, uh, so no, but wait, wait, wait, so like, all right.
Paul Ford:I don't think the fundamentals of human behavior change, even in relation
Paul Ford:to extremely exciting technology, what I do think happens is humans
Paul Ford:get excited by that possibility.
Paul Ford:And because we're so innately bored, we lead in and we go, Oh my God,
Paul Ford:AI is going to change everything.
Paul Ford:And I'm going to tell you the truth.
Paul Ford:I'm looking at the mid journey, like, you know, look at the
Paul Ford:images this AI can create.
Paul Ford:And it is big titty anime girls staring at the camera over and over and over again.
Paul Ford:I'm like, okay, here we are right here's where we've ended up.
Paul Ford:We've ended up back where you could have predicted.
Paul Ford:We'd end up big titty anime girls.
Paul Ford:One after the other, endlessly, and they're bad.
Paul Ford:It's like bad art.
Rich Ziade:yeah.
Paul Ford:makes, so we made a computer make bad art, and
Paul Ford:we're back to the boring place,
Rich Ziade:I think what you're saying is, is that, is that tech,
Rich Ziade:technology and computers and the internet don't, they, they aspire to
Rich Ziade:change human behavior, but just always going to revert back to the norm.
Paul Ford:all of our systems aspire to change human behavior.
Paul Ford:Religion, um, you know, health care, right?
Paul Ford:Like, what changes human behavior?
Paul Ford:Some drugs?
Paul Ford:Exercise regimes.
Paul Ford:Democracy is actually, you know, I'm not one of those people who's like,
Paul Ford:the founding fathers were the great geniuses, but what they were geniuses
Paul Ford:of is a kind of compromise, even when it was like the most ethically fraught
Paul Ford:compromise, like around slavery.
Paul Ford:They were like, we got, we got to figure it out.
Paul Ford:We're just going to get that.
Paul Ford:We're going to get away from England.
Paul Ford:We're going to get this thing together.
Paul Ford:Democracy is a fantastic compromise because you're just going to, I just
Paul Ford:went, um, to pick my kids up from camp.
Paul Ford:So you always want to have like a little mission along the way.
Paul Ford:So my wife and I stopped at the W.
Paul Ford:E.
Paul Ford:B.
Paul Ford:Dubois, uh, sort of home site.
Paul Ford:So for those who don't know him, look him up.
Rich Ziade:in Massachusetts.
Paul Ford:Yes.
Paul Ford:Absolute founding, uh, one of the most brilliant people
Paul Ford:who's ever lived in America.
Paul Ford:First, uh, African American PhD.
Paul Ford:Uh, at Harvard, I think, and
Rich Ziade:Yeah,
Paul Ford:kind of created, created infographics and a real sort of got
Paul Ford:slammed at the end as a communist, partially because he joined the communist
Paul Ford:party, but like, you know, it was a true activist, uh, from the, from the.
Paul Ford:I guess the late 1800s, early 1900s, uh, into the 50s and 60s for the
Paul Ford:rights of African American people and sort of the global rights
Paul Ford:of, of African descended people.
Paul Ford:And you're up there and like what he said over and over, and this is as you do the
Paul Ford:walk through the woods where they have little plaques, he was a huge, huge fan
Paul Ford:of democracy because he just believed that it was probably the best way.
Paul Ford:To get change.
Paul Ford:Like that people would learn, and they would figure stuff out, and they would
Paul Ford:get smarter, and they would vote.
Paul Ford:And it...
Paul Ford:That's not a popular viewpoint when you throw everybody together in the town
Paul Ford:square on Twitter, but I still buy it I I think we're in a rough patch right now
Paul Ford:But I still buy that like we're smarter and better as humans that we were in like
Paul Ford:1840 Like we're it's just not as fast as like you would have thought when you
Paul Ford:got that Pentium 15 years ago, we didn't we don't move as fast as our technology
Rich Ziade:Yeah, and, and, and, that's a great point.
Rich Ziade:And, and, you know, we're talking about mechanisms that actually
Rich Ziade:change human behavior and actually...
Rich Ziade:Tip us in the right direction.
Rich Ziade:I think democracy is one of them I think what I would tweak to what
Rich Ziade:you're saying here is that I think what the Founding Fathers got right
Rich Ziade:is that All those systems they put in place all the checks and balances
Rich Ziade:all the mechanisms around like it's actually quite Distrustful of humans.
Rich Ziade:In fact,
Paul Ford:extremely
Rich Ziade:nobody can really do anything without the okay of everyone else.
Rich Ziade:And they knew they'd be at each other's throats, and they understood that.
Rich Ziade:And it's actually quite s it's almost like a, a cynical view of,
Rich Ziade:and of really embracing the idea that, look, this is gonna be shitty.
Rich Ziade:Right.
Rich Ziade:Let's how, how do we minimize the bad?
Paul Ford:every good system is paranoid about human behavior.
Paul Ford:I mean, a good, uh, counterexample here is what happened in the Catholic
Paul Ford:church around child abuse, right?
Paul Ford:Like the system is broke down.
Rich Ziade:Yeah,
Paul Ford:wasn't, they had so much faith in themselves that they exploited
Paul Ford:vulnerable people, which is exactly contrary to the whole fricking shebang,
Rich Ziade:yeah, yeah,
Paul Ford:Um, I would, I do want to just go off on a brief tangent.
Paul Ford:I started to watch John Adams, which was a miniseries on HBO.
Rich Ziade:With Paul Giamatti,
Paul Ford:That's the thing.
Paul Ford:I can't do it cause I can't, I can't
Rich Ziade:It's just,
Paul Ford:founding father, Paul Giamatti, it's cause it's just him.
Paul Ford:It's just him.
Paul Ford:It's just him.
Paul Ford:It's just him.
Paul Ford:It's just him.
Paul Ford:It's just him.
Paul Ford:He's
Rich Ziade:wife is Laura Dern in
Paul Ford:no, it's not Laura Dern.
Paul Ford:Laura Liddy
Rich Ziade:Laura Linney.
Rich Ziade:Who's, who just looks, like, looks the part.
Paul Ford:Oh, she's great.
Rich Ziade:dignified and thoughtful.
Rich Ziade:And then Paul Giamatti just fell out of a Brooklyn bodega into the 1700s.
Paul Ford:they shave his head at one point.
Paul Ford:You're just like, no, no, no, don't do this.
Rich Ziade:Yeah, yeah,
Paul Ford:Why don't you guys say, I'm off to Philadelphia, my dear.
Paul Ford:You know, just, oh
Rich Ziade:Oh God.
Paul Ford:Oh, you're really, if, if that was, you're, you're just like, there's
Paul Ford:no way this country can work out when you see that you're like, no wonder.
Rich Ziade:We can't end it on Paul Giamatti.
Rich Ziade:Let's sort of bring it home here.
Rich Ziade:I think, and I don't think this is advice, I think this is acknowledgement and
Rich Ziade:understanding that people don't change.
Rich Ziade:Human behavior doesn't change.
Rich Ziade:And that the systems that aspire to change And a lot of that comes from tech.
Rich Ziade:Some of it comes from philosophy.
Rich Ziade:Some of it comes from like, you know, political ideas.
Rich Ziade:It can be a lot of different things.
Rich Ziade:That system has to understand that people don't change.
Rich Ziade:To me, what democracy is, is...
Rich Ziade:There is the ideal and then there is the sort of Watered downs like look if
Rich Ziade:we can make it 20% better we won here.
Rich Ziade:It's still better than a dictatorship, right?
Rich Ziade:That's all we got That's all we got.
Rich Ziade:So let's run with that.
Rich Ziade:And I think Having that humility most that's the thing
Rich Ziade:about billionaires, right?
Rich Ziade:They're convinced that if it's their town square, it's gonna be different
Paul Ford:them in the office and they will say the words only I can fix it.
Rich Ziade:yeah, yeah.
Rich Ziade:It's wild.
Paul Ford:here, here's the thing, and I think about this, the, the product
Paul Ford:you and I are building now, it's called a board, it's the sponsor of
Paul Ford:this podcast, and so on and so forth.
Paul Ford:The products that I wanted to build in my thirties, let's say,
Rich Ziade:Mm.
Paul Ford:I still had a lot of like, if we get this right, boy,
Paul Ford:we're going to blow up the world.
Paul Ford:I really believe that.
Paul Ford:But what I've seen, and this is true of Google, this is true of
Paul Ford:Twitter, this is true of everything.
Paul Ford:There'll be these brief moments where you're like, whoa,
Paul Ford:new society just showed up.
Paul Ford:I can't believe it.
Paul Ford:Here we are.
Paul Ford:We're living in the future.
Paul Ford:And then the old stuff always asserts itself.
Paul Ford:I remember writing, you know the first time with Twitter, it
Paul Ford:was, um, and I wrote about this.
Paul Ford:I wrote about this for the New Yorker early days.
Paul Ford:It was when, uh, Turkey just turned off the internet.
Paul Ford:uh, like, People were, no, people were, uh, spray painting
Paul Ford:DNS, 8888, and then it's around
Rich Ziade:That's wild.
Paul Ford:because Erdogan had shut off the internet because everybody was using
Paul Ford:Twitter too much during the protests.
Rich Ziade:Yep.
Paul Ford:And it was like, and I remember postulating like, you know, a
Paul Ford:dictator with this megaphone, you know, we talk about it always being positive,
Paul Ford:positive, positive, a dictator with this megaphone could really do a lot of
Paul Ford:damage, never assuming that that would be an American president on Twitter.
Rich Ziade:Yeah.
Rich Ziade:Exactly.
Paul Ford:but, but yeah, no, no, all these platforms, what, what
Paul Ford:I think about the town square is that the global town square must
Paul Ford:be a very, very structured place.
Paul Ford:You can get a little signal in, media is a global town square, uh,
Paul Ford:democracy allows people to express themselves, constant expression of
Paul Ford:thousands and thousands of voices.
Paul Ford:Where everybody's together gets you like QAnon, right?
Paul Ford:Like it's, it's, it's dangerous that way because viral ideas can spread without,
Paul Ford:and it's that old line about, you know, a lie could travel the world five times
Paul Ford:before the truth puts on its boots.
Paul Ford:Like that,
Rich Ziade:Yeah.
Rich Ziade:Yeah.
Rich Ziade:Yeah.
Rich Ziade:Yeah.
Paul Ford:because you're satisfying people.
Paul Ford:You're giving them a sugared fat.
Paul Ford:Um, I really do believe that the best thing you could do building technology is
Paul Ford:empower small groups to do the things they want to do and hope everybody meets up
Paul Ford:later through the other, through the big systems that we use to manage our society.
Paul Ford:Um, you know, if I was 25, I think I'd believe differently, but this
Paul Ford:is, this is where I'm at right now.
Rich Ziade:I think, I think those small groups, especially ones that are act,
Rich Ziade:you know, active and towards a cause or trying to make something a little bit
Rich Ziade:better, they don't want, they don't want the dopamine hit of acknowledgement.
Rich Ziade:They just, they're doing their thing, they're following a
Rich Ziade:particular mission, and they're trying to make the world like 0.
Rich Ziade:2% better.
Rich Ziade:And that, or each other better, frankly.
Rich Ziade:It could be a hobby that has nothing to do with an altruistic
Rich Ziade:cause, and that's fine too.
Rich Ziade:Um, but at least it's not It's not running towards the scoring
Rich Ziade:mechanisms around social dynamics, which are always a bad scene.
Rich Ziade:It's just a bad scene.
Rich Ziade:right, Paul, tell me about a board.
Rich Ziade:You mentioned it earlier.
Paul Ford:Well, my friends, a board is a tool for managing
Paul Ford:all kinds of information.
Paul Ford:It is a tool for bringing in tons of links from the web and it turns
Paul Ford:them into these beautiful cards that you can move around and organize.
Paul Ford:You can put them in stacks, you can add tags to them.
Paul Ford:We just made it really easy to do whatever the thing is that you do.
Paul Ford:So if you are into model trades, a board is like a really good place to,
Paul Ford:for you and your model trade buds to
Rich Ziade:Rod Stewart, that's you.
Rich Ziade:We're talking to you right now.
Paul Ford:For those who don't know, Rod Stewart is an
Paul Ford:absolute model trade enthusiast.
Paul Ford:Um, no, like if you're like, truly, this is a good platform for model trade
Paul Ford:folks to organize themselves, figure out the beat up, look at the model
Paul Ford:trades that they really want to buy and they, you know, the little tiny.
Paul Ford:Trees, always get those little trees.
Paul Ford:You know what I'm talking about?
Rich Ziade:Yeah.
Paul Ford:them places.
Paul Ford:And, uh, so that, that's what a board is for.
Paul Ford:It's for that kind of community and that kind of group.
Paul Ford:Now that group could also be the local mutual aid society or the,
Paul Ford:the free library or the little company that you're starting.
Paul Ford:So it's, it's for that.
Paul Ford:So, but, but check it out on board.
Paul Ford:com.
Paul Ford:Really big changes coming really, really soon or big
Paul Ford:announcements coming from a board.
Paul Ford:If you, if you're not in yet, you are going to be in soon.
Paul Ford:That's the way I would put it.
Rich Ziade:Uh, and you're listening to Ziade Fort at the Ziade Fort podcast,
Rich Ziade:advisor's podcast at ZiadeFort.
Rich Ziade:com and at Ziade Fort on X, which we use.
Rich Ziade:We're not going to hide that fact.
Rich Ziade:We're on X.
Rich Ziade:We tweet out our episodes.
Paul Ford:got yelled at it.
Paul Ford:I got yelled at about it the other day by a sort of old internet head
Paul Ford:who's like, Why are you still here?
Paul Ford:And it was like, Oh man, I don't know.
Paul Ford:Who cares?
Paul Ford:Like, there is an element of like, who cares?
Paul Ford:Just
Rich Ziade:Oh, I think that one of the healthiest, we've had, we've talked
Rich Ziade:about this, about not caring too much for all the wrong reasons on the internet.
Rich Ziade:It's like, who cares is one of the healthiest things you can say to
Rich Ziade:yourself while you're using the internet.
Paul Ford:I feel that New York City really helps here because like when
Paul Ford:I, I come down out of the office, there's a guy sitting on the steps
Paul Ford:reading a book who's a retired doorman
Rich Ziade:Yeah.
Paul Ford:and, uh, and, uh, he doesn't care.
Rich Ziade:He doesn't care.
Rich Ziade:He's reading his book.
Paul Ford:He's not
Rich Ziade:got a pile of books.
Rich Ziade:He's not worried about it.
Paul Ford:he's living a completely functional American life where
Paul Ford:everything we do is kind of relevant
Rich Ziade:Yes, I know this person and he says things to
Rich Ziade:me like, it looks nice today.
Rich Ziade:I'm going to take a longer walk than usual.
Rich Ziade:That's literally what he says.
Paul Ford:literally, it is, he is every single element of citizenship
Paul Ford:that we have and has decided on a different path, and it is.
Paul Ford:He's rocking it, as far as I can tell,
Rich Ziade:He's killing it.
Paul Ford:he's not thinking about Twitter right now.
Rich Ziade:Not at all.
Rich Ziade:He doesn't even know what it is.
Paul Ford:So I, I do feel like there's just enormous, that guy is
Paul Ford:right there in the global square.
Paul Ford:He's just like, would you all shut up?
Rich Ziade:yeah, yeah.
Rich Ziade:He's having his like biscotti and espresso and just watching everybody.
Paul Ford:jealousy every time I walk by.
Paul Ford:Alright friends, we will talk to you soon and thank you for
Rich Ziade:a lovely week.