Oh my!
That’s been my rule for quite a while now.
Oh my!
That’s been my rule for quite a while now.
The real issue with Tumblr’s pinning promotional feature isn’t that it’s somehow awful; it’s not, really; it’s no worse than “sponsored” Tweets or any other insertion of paid content —whether the advertiser is your friend or a company— into a feed which you’ve ostensibly assembled according to your own preferences. No one likes advertisements, but Tumblr has given me a lot, more than I can repay, so why should I begrudge them their efforts at keeping the lights on? I’d rather pay a monthly fee, but most users wouldn’t, no matter what they say.
What is sort of a drag, though, is that paying to pin your post is paying Tumblr to correct Tumblr’s most significant design defect: that it still presents posts in the Dashboard by according to a naive and arbitrary system of prioritization, namely: chronology.
Contrast Tumblr and Twitter —where you must wonder: when should I post? Did no one like this because of the hour, or because it sucked? Should I wait until after such-and-such trending topic before posting? etc.— with Quora or Facebook, where content is surfaced to you based on whether you want to see it, based on both implied preferences derived from recorded and analyzed behaviors and from explicit signals you provide.
While we are all habituated to the chronological imperative, it is as bad a way to distribute content as live broadcast television is when compared with on-demand access to shows. When your favorite artist posts his watercolors has nothing to do with how much you like them, but on Tumblr, it has everything to do with whether you see them, unless there is such an abundance of interest in them that everyone reblogs them. Tumblr rewards what is vastly popular in part because it cannot surface interesting posts in a more granular, individuated way.
Thus: the community is obliged to deal with this defect, and tools like the Radar and Spotlight —both of which are fine, but anemic in the face of this challenge— make an effort too. And now, you can also pay to deal with this problem, provided you have the sappy arrogance evidently inculcated in us all by this advertorial culture of ours required to say to your followers: I feel like you must see this or take steps not to.
(I lost more than 100 followers when I used the pinning feature, but should have lost more).
Tumblr rewards luck in post-times far too much; Quora rewards good content. Since the reduction of the arbitrary is a major aim of any system which seeks a “good,” Tumblr’s reliance on recency —which is, again, unrelated to quality— is a shame.
I’m sure they’re working on something rad and cool to address that, or something I can’t imagine. But I think that’s the only real issue with the pins. They only even make sense because all of us are still dependent on the coincidence of posting times. The central design flaw of all blogging platforms and Twitter and much of the Internet in general remains as Joshua put it:
CREATING A GOOD BLOG IS LIKE WRITING A GOOD BOOK THAT NO ONE READS PAST THE FIRST PAGE
Creating a good blog is like hiding your treasure under piles of new treasure.
Creating a bad blog is like burying your trash under piles of new trash.Someone should fix that.
~ Living at the bottom of the world in the Land of Tomorrow makes the tyranny of timezones even more problematic. I miss so much relevant content already, and I don’t often feel like scrolling back through multiple pages to find what I want to see, as opposed to the overload by the blitz-posters.
Which IMO, is anyone who posts 20+ times a day. Based on liking their content, I’ve followed people who later started posting up to 100 times a day. But not for long…
If you use this, it better be to promote something damn worthy. Some suggestions:
~ FYI, if this pin gets used to promote POS posts, I will POQ.