We’re nine days into 2025, and it’s already full of exhausting levels of controversy before we’ve even had a turnover in power in my home country of the United States. We’ve seen resignations of world leaders, wars continuing and getting worse and worse (you know where), the owner of Twitter continuing his tirade of lunacy and demonstrating why the billionaire class is not to be revered, California ablaze with a horrendous and large wildfire, right wing thinktanks developing plans to out and attack Wikipedia editors as any fascist-friendly organization would do, Meta rolling out and rolling back GenAI profiles on its platforms, and, just yesterday, the same Meta announcing sweeping changes to its moderation policies that, in a charitable reading, encourage hate-based harassment and abuse of vulnerable populations, promotion and support for disinformation, and other problems, all of which are so profound that people are talking about a mass exodus from the platform to…somewhere. It’s that last thing that brings me back to the blog today. Since the takeover at Twitter, social networks have been in a state of chaos. Platforms have risen and fallen — or only risen so much — and nothing I would call stability has formed. Years ago, I (and many others far more popular than me) remarked that we’ve ceded the territory of self-owned or small-scale third party spaces for massive third party platforms where we have minimal to no control or say and which can be stripped away in a tech-scale heartbeat. By putting all our ducks into a bin of unstable chaos, we’re also expending our time and energy on something that won’t last, requiring us to expend more time and energy finding alternatives, rebuilding communities, and then repeating the process again. In the present environment, that’s impossible to ignore.1 This is all rather reductive, but this post is not the place to talk about all the ways that social networks have impacted control over our own spaces and narratives. Another time, perhaps. I similarly don’t have space to talk about the fact that some of the platforms we currently have, however functional they may be, have placed many of us in a moral quagmire, as in the case of Meta’s recent moderation changes. Another time… ↩
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5 Responses
Hm. Let's see…
I check out most of these on a daily basis (or, that is, I check out their gathered feeds):
io9 – Maybe not a blog, per se, but still great for sf/f culture and science/geek news
SF Signal, of course
SF Novelists
Locus
A Dribble of Ink
Fantasy Book Critic
Pat's Fantasy Hotlist
Fantasy Literature
Magical Words
The SFWA blog
The Night Bazaar
And those are just the genre ones. Got plenty more for science, geek, freelancing, publishing, general fiction/book interests, etc.
JV: Thanks for the comment.
I follow a bunch of those, so I'll check out the ones that aren't already on there.
Do feel free to suggest science/geek ones, though 🙂
Besides all JRVogt's recs (and I do read all of those feeds mentioned)
Speculative Fiction Junkie
Damien G. Walter's Blog
A Fantasy Reader
Gav Reads
Pornokitsch
Staffer's Musings
Elitist Books
Dark Wolf's Fantasy Review
The World SF Blog
Weird Fiction Review
Fantasy Faction
Fantasy Cafe
Here's a more comprehensive list:
Writing/Publishing Sites
Digital Book World
Rachelle Gardner's agent blog
RMFW (local writing guild)
TeleRead
PublishersWeekly/Publishers Lunch
Geek/Science/Tech Sites
Geeks Are Sexy
Gizmag
Gizmodo
Lifehacker
The Verge
Wired
Mashable
TechCrunch
Freelancing
Copyblogger
Entrepreneur
Fast Company
FreelanceSwitch
Advertising Age
Nice ones, Adam. Spotting a few there I need to add on my end, methinks.