I'm a bit torn.
Not in candidate, because the legality of me doing anything campaign-related is dubious enough that I avoid any of it as much as possible (in reading apparently I legally can donate specifically due to my greencard, but that's too tenuous to trust).
As it's been known for a while now, I'm very anti-monopoly, and find that the tech sector has a serious monopoly problem. Their defense has always been that "with us gone China will fill the void", and on thinking on it, they're not entirely wrong. Chinese companies have already demonstrated their willingness to get involved in any economic venture that they can, and their general allegiance to China. Any destruction of US monopolies would have to coincide with protection against foreign monopolies from shoving their way in.
That, or whatever force that takes out US monopolies has to take out China too.
So... stuck with US monopolies, stuck with Chinese monopolies, or global societal collapse? I suppose if I'm leaning towards the latter, that I'm better off learning to stop worrying and love the US tech industry. At least, as a means to an end.
It's all in how you bring in anti-monopoly laws. For example you could crush Facebook so that there are lots of little unconnected Facebooks each with their own user-base, which would indeed allow foreign monopolistic versions to compete strongly against them.
Or, you bring in transferrable accounts, which I believe Andrew Yang might have raised. This fights the monopoly in a better way, since the transferable accounts could be made preferable to being locked in to a closed network.
There are some arguments that this could never work - who owns your comments on a Facebook article for example, but this is still stuck in "Facebook" thinking. The trick is to split the concept of "accounts" from "content". Facebook and Co keep you locked into their platform because the content is locked in with them. Transferrable accounts aren't about "moving" between Facebook A and Facebook B which is run by a "rival facebook", it's about creating an open platform where the content itself isn't centralized in a walled garden.
Here's a possible outline:
- Have social media "account vendors" who work like email providers. But the key difference is that the accounts would be transferable between vendors, in the same way that domains are transferable. Similar to email you have a contact list, and the contacts aren't in any
specific "facebook", they can be across different vendors. This solves the "transferring and keeping my friends list" bit.
- Have third-party "content vendors". This would be a network of third party vendors who have things like news feeds etc. Similar to Disqus, the content vendor would be the ones hosting the posts, videos, games etc. So the question of "who owns my posts if I move away from Facebook" is solved too. The post is owned by whoever is hosting the thread its in. So for example Ars Technica would have their own social media feed, curated by Ars Technica, and a layer of third-party content hosting companies would spring up too, and Ars Technica would be free to move between a number of hosting companies for their "openSocial" compatible content, who could provide paid services such as forum moderation and management.
So, the way to realistic break up giant social media isn't in fact that technically complex. Just have light-weight "account providers" similar to email providers and have a layer of third-party "content hosters" / newsfeeds and the like which are compatible with the hosting. The best advantage is that you'd no be longer stuck in some asinine walled garden like Facebook with their shitty set up.