Wingy wrote:CIN-C-STAR wrote:I thought it was a good answer to a question that would be more properly directed at Elon Musk or a politician that could regulate social media, not the Commissioner of the WNBA.
Don't remember Adam Silver having to answer for posts on Twitter directed at NBA players.
She kept the focus on the product, as she should, because her job is to grow revenue for players and owners, not to police the internet which she has zero authority to do.
It's like people are just finding out that social media is toxic and filled with trolls, agent provocateurs, foreign agents and bots. Really people should stop paying attention to it, and that would do more good than constantly talking about it like it's important when it really isn't.
I'm glad she didn't take the bait. Why do people want the league and players associated with this stuff anyway? You realize that will only encourage more people to use the WNBA to get attention for themselves in all the wrong ways, right? Keeping it in the news cycle and giving it a lot of attention is exactly what these useful idiots on social media want.
It’s really simple to condemn racism and all
the bad isms in a single sentence. That’s the lowest of low bars anyone needs to clear, much less the leader of an org representing a lot of minorities, black, and LGBTQ people.
I’ve never used Twitter and never will. Nor Instagram, Snap, etc. Ok, maybe I should never say never (eg- younger family may use it someday), but think you get the point. I avoid it like the plague.
But I, and perhaps you, am the old man yelling at cloud. I have the awareness that this stuff’s just part of younger generations’ lives. There’s saturation, it’s ingrained, and it’s expected as normal. Sadly. But it is what it is…for better, but mostly (IMO) worse. You saying just ignore it, and stop paying attention is completely out of touch with reality and our society now.
Add Serena Williams to the list of old men yelling at clouds, I guess.
Her recent comments about Clark: "I just love that she tries to stay grounded and that she doesn't look at her social. I get it. I don't either."
I don't think it should be difficult for anyone to condemn racism, though that's not exactly what Engelbert was asked and if she were specifically asked how she feels about people using the WNBA to promote racism I'm sure her answer would be more in line with the one you're looking for.
But regardless, as has been said before, she has no authority to police the internet and her comments would have zero effect on the bots and trolls and spammers and wannabe influencers spouting toxic takes on Twitter in a desperate cry for attention.
And statistically way more teens use Tik Tok and Youtube than Twitter.
Twitter is a bot-filled, male-dominated platform that is rife with foreign actors and other disingenuous posters. Celebrities use it disproportionately to grow their fanbase and pump up their revenue, and media members use it disproportionately, too, which I think serves as a form of media bias in which it gets a disproportionate amount of attention that gives the false impression that "everyone" is on Twitter and thinks it is important, when that's not really true statistically.
That's not to say that there isn't a story here, I'm just not sure it involves the Commissioner of the WNBA. Twitter uses algorithms that favor right-wing takes and has softened its stance on policing misinformation and hate speech since Musk took over. That's certainly worth covering.
https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-59011271https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/02/technology/twitter-hate-speech.html