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The Catfish Principal

I think I may be developing a rare social media condition: Chronic Catfish Fatigue.

Symptoms include mild skepticism, occasional existential reflection, and staring at profile photos like a detective who just discovered Photoshop has a friggin' PhD.

Fuuuu'qu!

Recently someone sent me a.. “proof photo.”

Well known User.

We'd shared banter here in the thread..

This mutual...common ground?...stumbled us in to DMs.

You know… the modern digital equivalent of “see, I’m real.”

Proof of life.

The only problem was the image was 99% AI generated and 1% like it had briefly met a human sometime in 2014.

Now here’s the strange part:

It didn’t make me angry.

It just made me… human for a minute..I think.

Because behind every weird internet interaction there’s usually three possibilities:

1. A scammer running three accounts and a crypto wallet.

2. A real person somewhere in the world also trying to be interesting, not lonely, not bored, not invisible.

3. Some dude named Frank whom longs to be...Francesca. 💃🏻

Social media trains us to become suspicious of everything...photos, stories, emotions, even kindness for god sake.

Eventually you don’t just question the fake things....hell no..

You start questioning the real ones too.

And that might be the actual tragedy of the internet.

Not the catfish.

But the fact that we’re slowly becoming people who can’t tell the difference between a face, a filter, and a person anymore.

Anyway… if anyone needs me, I’ll be over here developing a new verification system.

Step 1: Send a picture holding today’s newspaper.

Step 2: Also be slightly awkward in it.
Because honestly…

...awkward might be the last proof that someone is still human.


🔥
🩷
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That's well written and I know that kind of burnout that comes off paranoia. There are two ways you can handle it.
1. Detach from 'all life' on such a social media which takes too much time and effort to verify and enjoy interactions from neutral grounds. Then it pretty much doesn't matter who it is on the other end.

2. Interact knowing what is on the other side can be anything and anyone but you're just going to enjoy it in the moment and not get attached.

Otherwise, no matter how good a verification system you have, you might watch your energy drain even further with all the what ifs and whys as you sift through for one good out of many multiple shady agenda people.
Punxi · F
@itsnotimportant That’s actually a very grounded way of looking at it....
The strange thing about social media is that the search for certainty often ends up destroying the very thing people came there for in the first place, a moment of human connection.
@Punxi Agree. Unfortunately, anonymity as an umbrella we all fall under on here allows the human trickster side to come out to play. Some people have very defined trickster sides and guess where they all will be attracted to.

Having said that, having a medium via which we now try to make human connections seems to lose in translation the more subtle and yet more important parts of it. It is indeed quite sad.