Community by Design
E. Glen Weyl, Luke Thorburn, Emillie de Keulenaar, Jacob Mchangama, Divya Siddarth, Audrey Tang

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new social media platform model that explicitly incorporates social fabric as an input and output, aiming to enhance social cohesion and fair representation through community-based content curation and targeted support.
Contribution
It introduces a platform design that explicitly values social fabric, enabling communities and citizens to influence content and support underserved groups, aligning platform incentives with social cohesion.
Findings
A new platform model emphasizing social fabric as input and output.
Mechanisms for community and citizen influence via subscriptions and targeted support.
Application scenarios across productivity, political, and cultural platforms.
Abstract
Social media empower distributed content creation by algorithmically harnessing "the social fabric" (explicit and implicit signals of association) to serve this content. While this overcomes the bottlenecks and biases of traditional gatekeepers, many believe it has unsustainably eroded the very social fabric it depends on by maximizing engagement for advertising revenue. This paper participates in open and ongoing considerations to translate social and political values and conventions, specifically social cohesion, into platform design. We propose an alternative platform model that includes the social fabric an explicit output as well as input. Citizens are members of communities defined by explicit affiliation or clusters of shared attitudes. Both have internal divisions, as citizens are members of intersecting communities, which are themselves internally diverse. Each is understood to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMedia, Religion, Digital Communication · Social Media and Politics
