Comment by swed420
> It's a matter of incentives. The profit motive is fundamentally opposed to a low-intervention platform for democratic communication.
Exactly.
It seems the only way to sidestep this growing problem is to create a profit free platform, and view it almost as a utility but is openly owned and controlled by "the people."
The vTaiwan and g0v ("gov zero") projects are relevant starter examples for a newer type of distributed governance:
https://www.stearthinktank.com/post/deconstructing-binary-ci...
That reminds me of the surprising and perverse effects witnessed during the Roman Empire's downward spiral.
One of the reforms was going from citizen soldiers who must provide their own gear to government provided weaponry and armor. Despite on its face being more egalitarian this resulted instead in consolidation of personal power and lead to more stratification. Quartermasters became kingmakers, just like how coups were lead by quartermasters in the Napoleonic era as they controlled food and provided payment.
There must always be an owner and don't trust "the people" to be anything more than a populist's device to assign legitimacy to their supporters and other dissenters.