On the new Mastodon Content Warning design 

The system is what it does and the design is what it does.

In this case, the new Mastodon content warning design is explicitly designed to discourage use of the content warning functionality.

It puts big glaring warning colours on what most of the time is a tag or descriptor of the post itself. Like it is in this thread.

I'm not warning about anything, its just a tag/subject line.

The phrase/terminology "Content Warning" has always been flawed.

As per Merriam-Webster:

the act of warning : the state of being warned

something that warns or serves to warn
especially : a notice or bulletin that alerts the public to an imminent hazard (such as a tornado, thunderstorm, or flood)"

merriam-webster.com/dictionary

A lot of the time, a so called Content Warning is not a warning at all.

So functionally what this terminology and design does is discourage its own use.

People using Mastodon especially newcomers are unlikely to use it because they think "well I'm not warning people of anything, why would I use a Content Warning for this post?" and they are not incorrect in thinking that.

On the new Mastodon Content Warning design 

@packetcat so I'm not going to argue that the new design is over the top or problematic bacause I don't necessarily disagree.

Something I want to talk about though is this:

I don't like and don't want to use content warnings as a subject line.

I want people to be exposed to my thoughts or interests, even if they don't share them. Especially if what I have to say might pique their curiosity whereas they wouldn't have clicked on the CW.

If people don't like to hear about so and so (unless of course it's a subject recognized as heavy or triggering) they have the agency to filter, mute and unfollow me.

I know that "cw field as subject line" is a common practice in fedi circles but it's really not that universal. And I'm also not the only one who feels like that. I would heavily dislike if that feature was reworked into something that would push making it a social expectation in this space.

On the new Mastodon Content Warning design 

@Siph @packetcat eh, i think you’re imagining user behaviour which doesn’t really exist here. the meme is “sees content warning, goes ‘that sounds terrible’, clicks it anyway, i don’t know what i expected”, not “doesn’t bother keeping up with friends because they don’t share the same interests than me”. if your avatar next to the post isn’t enough to get your friends to click “show more”, find better friends. nobody only opens CWs which match their existing interests and leaves all the other ones closed

the same as you wouldn’t ignore an email from a friend that has a subject line of “bulbasaur” just because your starter was charmander. it’s still an email from your friend!! you’re still going to open it!!

re: On the new Mastodon Content Warning design 

@Lady I really hate that you’re framing this as "imagining user behavior". You’re assume I’m talking out of my ass when it’s literally how I and other people I know use this website, and that your experience is universal.

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re: On the new Mastodon Content Warning design 

@Siph you use the website by ignoring posts with CWs? why, if that’s the behaviour you find problematic?

re: On the new Mastodon Content Warning design 

@Lady look, your first interaction with me was to question my honesty by telling me I’m making shit up. I did nothing that warrants being this confrontational when I was having a normal conversation. I’m not inclined to engage further with you. Bye

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📟🐱 GlitchCat

A small, community‐oriented Mastodon‐compatible Fediverse (GlitchSoc) instance managed as a joint venture between the cat and KIBI families.