Aren’t you glad to have this site as an alternative to Facebook?! ?
YES. I abandoned that dumpster fire long ago.
Around 2010 I got a job building social media components for various websites. I came to find out what kind of data collection policies were in place at Facebook and noped out shortly after.
I stopped any significant use of Facebook long ago, I’m very active on twitter... I’m glad to have this not as an alternative but because it’s very specifically delving into a topic I find important, I conclude much of religion to be damaging but damaging or not I don’t believe we are served by indulging in falsehoods... I have an atheist twitter page that I will continue to be active on, I sit here toggrling between them and my political pages... I like compartmentalizing my interests so when I want to delve deep on a topic nothing is in the way.
FB really got to be a battleground; what a drag. I'm not a picture poster, and I don't suffer others to know every little aspect of my doings (which are not manifold, at any rate), so I've pretty much got my use of it confined to Messenger; and the rare harangue of an errant trumpanzee, not that I believe that does any good, but I just like to stay in practice.
Are not I glad? If I respond "yes" does that not mean I am not glad?
I are glad.
Glad... glad, glad, glad... gladiator?
Glad alligator?
Does that not answer the question?
@KimmyKatt That's 250% of my personality, the rest is nonsense and mischief.
Yes! Though I'm still on facebook, because so many of my friends and relatives are on there.
Sure am...but I'm also active on another app (that is not FB) that is good too. Met some interesting people on here already.
@Nimravide Minds.com, and it's both a website and app.
Fuck yes, its not just an alternative its my main go too sight at the moment.
Its my only site!
I still want to help animals with my art so I stay on FB just about
I kind of need Facebook, it's where my communities for most of my diagnoses hang out. Not many of us Rainbow Zebras on here (that's people with multiple rare disorders).
[theguardian.com]