- {1.5a2a} context collapse can lead to information intended for one group to reach another without the necessary context to understand the purpose.
- An innocuous Tweet meant for your small group of followers runs the risk of trending and being seen by thousands or millions of people who aren’t “in” on the joke — or whatever the broader context is.
- This often ends in poor-faith engagement at best; harassment, etc. at worst and commonly.
- I feel like this is related to {4p} poe’s law, which essentially says that sincerity is hard to distinguish online; that’s exacerbated by lack of control over audience ({1.5a2} social media decontextualizes our relationships by flattening our social network) and lack of control over performance ({1.5a1a} social media removes agency in our identity performance. )