They Gossiped At Brunch. Now There’s a Mob After Them | People are sharing other people’s gossip on TikTok, and experts say that it could have IRL effects::The growing trend of gossip TikTok is putting people’s personal lives on blast — and it risks setting up a self-imposed surveillance state.
Jesus people live sad lives if a bit of irrelevant gossip is what passes for entertainment nowadays.
Always has been
I mean, gossip magazines were a thing in the past. This isn’t a new phenomenon.
That depends on how hips good it is
This is why you carry a lightweight cell jammer.
Note: use thereof is a felony and they chase you for it
That is true.
deleted by creator
Seems pretty obvious to me: communications jamming is extremely antisocial behavior which could be life threatening
deleted by creator
I love that the solution isn’t to watch your words or what you say in public, but use technology.
Illegal tech, at that. Jammers are hella illegal and the FCC doesn’t play around.
Instructions unclear, jammed cellphone up ass.
Does it give better reception?
Dpnt know aint my ass that its up.
y’know, you make a good point.
deleted by creator
“Freedom of speech” doesn’t mean “I should be able to say what I want without any consequences”.
deleted by creator
I sent this comment to your local PD!
Cool. Have fun!
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
This has the same energy that my little pony friendship is magic episode where The cutie mark crusaders start writing gossip about everyone in ponyville. And everyone just stops talking to them after finding out It’s them
There’s an episode of The Office with a similar premise
This is the best summary I could come up with:
The video, which got over 14 million views, was largely praised on TikTok— even inspiring Meiz to create a social club in New York that helps people meet new friends.
But as the format continues to grow in popularity, the trend isn’t just turning personal information into mineable content online — it’s slowly carving away privacy in real life.
In Yancy’s case, less than seven days after her video was posted, it had been viewed 1.2 million times and included a comments section full of sleuths desperate to find Sarah.
In her video, which has been viewed 2.3 million times, Kotzur said the gossip went from “tame” to “sinister,” describing the women complaining about their bridesmaids’ dresses, the wedding flowers, and how they were asked to style their hair.
Psychologist Francis McAndrew tells Rolling Stone that gossip itself has been a longstanding part of how people share information and knowledge in social settings, which is why it can be so compelling online even if it centers around strangers.
“Because if the goal of gossip as a societal reinforcement structure is to teach other people how to behave, then what you should be doing is leaning over and asking questions to that table across from you and not posting it on the internet.
The original article contains 1,180 words, the summary contains 211 words. Saved 82%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!