Elon Musk’s Plan to Make Likes Anonymous on X: A Controversial Move
Elon Musk has a history of floating edgy ideas for X and not implementing them or, at the least, slow-walking them. Nearly a year ago, Musk said he planned to eliminate the ability to block users, a development that wouldāve rendered the site formerly known as Twitter into even more of a hellscape. He hasnāt actually done it, and if he ever does, thereās no guarantee the change will stick.
But Muskās latest plan to axe one of the siteās most famous features has been set in motion: Soon, likes of posts will be anonymous to all but the person who sent the post and the person who pressed the like button. Musk and his engineers say that the update is a matter of encouraging free expression. āImportant to allow people to like posts without getting attacked for doing so!ā Musk argues. His director of engineering says, āPublic likes are incentivizing the wrong behavior. For example, many people feel discouraged from liking content that might be āedgyā in fear of retaliation from trolls, or to protect their public image.ā
Musk’s Justification
According to Musk, concealing the identity of tweet-likers is a way to let people adhere to their convictions. He argues that it allows people to like posts without getting attacked, encouraging free expression.
His director of engineering adds that public likes incentivize the wrong behavior, as many people feel discouraged from liking content that might be considered controversial or edgy due to fear of retaliation from trolls or to protect their public image.
Criticism of the Change
However, this rationale is seen by many as silly. Critics argue that it allows people to indicate approval of a post without having to personally stand up for anything. It comes across as a move by Musk to cater to thin-skinned users who canāt handle social blowback for indicating a belief. If theyāre not comfortable airing that belief, they could simply not press the like button.
The Real Motive
But whatās really happening is more nefarious than Musk anonymizing a key feature of the platform to protect some postersā feelings. The much likelier driver of the change is the embarrassing morass of spam, bots, and platform manipulation filling the void on Muskās X. By hiding information about who likes a post, Musk has made it easier to obscure his mess.
The Role of Likes in Social Media
On social media, a like serves two functions. One is to inform the platform about what we like or what riles us up so that the company running the platform can serve us the right kind of slop to keep us at the trough and sell us to advertisers. The other is to provide a passive vehicle for expressing appreciation or approval. In that way, likes are a major tool of online community building, like a digital nod of the head or a pat on the back.
Nearly every platform honors the likeās social utility. For example, if I want to see each of the 3,812,516 accounts that liked Kylie Jennerās most recent Instagram posts, I can do that. If I want to see every person who liked my buddy Bobās job announcement on LinkedIn, I can do that. This ability isnāt universal; Instagram can hide who likes a userās posts, but only if the poster enables the feature. Redditās upvotes are private even to the person who has created the post being upvoted. But anonymity is baked all the way into Redditās culture.
Lack of Content Moderation
Guess which social media giant absolutely does not have the infrastructure or desire to prevent antisocial behavior? Musk slashed Twitterās content moderation staff to the bone when he took over in the fall of 2022. In a way, it was a victory for him, as his mass layoffs and chasing-off of employees saved Twitter millions of dollars. Despite frequent outages and bugs in Muskās early days in charge, the platform is still standing. Press āpost,ā and your text will appear on the internet instantly.
But as a matter of user experience, Musk has allowed X to deteriorate horribly. The most noticeable problem is spam. Automated accounts shilling crypto hustles or DIY pornography werenāt a part of many usersā everyday experience before Musk arrived. These days, theyāre practically inescapable in the replies to many usersā posts and are firing off direct messages with reckless abandon.
Advertising Issues
An adjacent problem is the advertising. Blue chip advertisers began to flee the moment Musk came aboard. Some have returned, but Xās owner often finds fresh ways to push them away. Late in 2023, both Muskās personal antisemitic remarks and those he allowed to appear next to ad content caused more companies to hightail it off the platform. X appears to have fewer frequent users now than before Muskās reign, so the advertisers still on the site are preaching to a smaller congregation.
Incentive to Hide Likes
These failures dovetail with one another in a way that had to make it appealing to shield the identities of accounts that like posts. A lot of the ads currently featured on X are straightforwardly terrible. Before Disney yanked advertising from the platform, you might have run across an ad for a new Marvel movie. At this point, you have a better chance of being served an ad for a weirdly named crypto product youāve never heard of in your life. You are less likely to engage with that than Deadpool, and the return on investment for Xās partners is likely to decline.
But what if you didnāt need to engage? What if accounts of questionable origin, ones without regular people behind them, could backfill that engagement? Thatās a bit easier to pull off when the general public canāt see whoās behind the accounts juicing the numbers.
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Conclusion
The same incentive exists for all sorts of hackery. Foreign governments (even American allies, it turns out) have used X to run inauthentic influence campaigns against members of Congress. Disguising those actions is easier when most people have no concept of whoās really engaging with posts. Any motivated politician or pundit with a point to make will similarly now have an easier time creating an impression that an inflated number of people on the internet support their ideas. Twitter likes were never a great form of resistance, but with their public visibility, they were their own sort of barrier against bad behaviour.
Musk has every reason to lower that barrier. Yet the main argument against trusting him is that perhaps his most frequent area of dishonesty since buying Twitter has been platform manipulation. When Musk first struck his deal for Twitter in the spring of 2022, he cited ādefeating the spam botsā as a motivator. When he tried to back out of the deal, he paradoxically argued that it was because there were too many inauthentic accounts, the exact thing heād said he wanted to defeat when he made the deal. When he put blue verification badges up for sale, he pitched it as a way to ensure usersā authenticity. That too was ridiculous, as the new verification system has made Twitter an impossible place to get reliable information. Hiding who likes a post is just one more step in making it more difficult to sift through the garbage.
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