Layers of Interpretation
In the shifting landscape of our digital commons, the words the leaders of these corporate social platforms use have become shapeshifters, their meanings bending like light through murky water. As we witness the transformation of our shared online spaces, I find myself creating a new dictionary for these times—a translation guide for what remains unsaid.
When they say “free expression,” I want you to hear “the end of community care.”
When they say “algorithmic neutrality,” I want you to hear “the automation of amplified harm.”
When they say “marketplace of ideas,” I want you to hear “a colosseum where truth wrestles with virality.”
When they say “content-neutral platform,” I want you to hear “we’ve chosen profit over protection.”
When they say “open dialogue,” I want you to hear “we’ve removed the guardrails.”
When they say “reduced content moderation,” I want you to hear “we’ve dismissed the digital gardeners.”
When they say “user empowerment,” I want you to hear “you’re on your own now.”
When they say “engagement metrics,” I want you to hear “behavior we can monetize.”
When they say “democratic discourse,” I want you to hear “the loudest voices win.”
When they say “digital town square,” I want you to hear “unmoderated chaos.”
These aren’t just semantic games—they’re the architecture of our new digital reality. Each phrase is another layer between what we’re told and what we experience, between the promise of connection and the practice of division.
I find myself returning to the early dreams of the web, when we imagined digital spaces as gardens to be tended, not markets to be exploited. It’s time to reclaim not just our platforms, but our very language—to speak plainly about what we’re building, what we’re breaking, and what we’re willing to sacrifice in the name of unconstrained growth.
The web I want to inhabit still has gardeners. It still has carpenters and caretakers. It still believes in the power of boundaries to create safety, and the strength of moderation to cultivate community. Most importantly, it still understands that true freedom comes not from the absence of constraints, but from the presence of care.