Tiktok and Instagram already do it. The algorithm reinforces biases which might seem like a personal problem, but there's no real way to escape them because the app doesn't have any UI to do it. Bluesky is an improvement but it hasn't really taken off and that feature is kind of buried. It also doesn't really let you browse through everything posted to the site. This situation reduces discoverability of information. Like in the old days before the internet except everything is online now.
Maybe Bluesky indicates, that people don't really care. Web surfing is dead. Or is it just a consequence of not allowing hyperlinks anymore? Like in the old days when hyperlinks didn't exist? I hope to use AI to facilitate hyperlinking, based on how common a word is. What if you had to tap and hold to access a hyperlink on mobile, hopefully solving the UX problem? What if all hyperlinks were buttons on a side of the screen? There has to be a way to keep an area clear for scrolling with fingers without banning hyperlinks..
But then how would they be presented to the user without making them think that you want to keep them hooked? TT and IG give the illusion of being able to quit anytime, in an uncluttered UI. Then you have social media banning outlinks too in order to keep you on their app and drive up ad revenue. This again kills the web because it reduces linking. When they do show links like hashtags, they are hard to press since they are close together and look cluttered. How can we bring hyperlinks to a mobile-friendly, user-friendly UI? E-commerce apps do it well, are highly discoverable, but why not social media? The algorithm has been proven to drive ad revenue instead of hyperlinks and discoverability, and they still ban outlinks.
Apps are a single point of failure. It reduces information diversity in several ways: sources, hosting and contents. It's as if all books were published by the same or a few publishers (apps) which might not seem like a big deal, but it's very very hard to move to another publisher. And its very very hard to make new publishers available to people, because they don't know any better. The migration costs are very high. Everyone only knows how to read from that particular publisher and maybe 2 others.
If the publisher thinks something won't sell or will harm it, it's not revealed even if it would be very helpful and drive sales. AKA the algorithm. I've had to create and painstakingly curate new accounts because of this, and people don't even know it's possible. Since they can't read stuff published by another publisher they don't learn about it. It's very hard to find out about other publishers and migrate to them due to familiarity, muscle memory and frankly the algorithm. Existing publishers can prevent people from moving to other publishers by preventing people from learning about them. For example Instagram banned links or even mentions of pixelfed and 404 media.
Hyperlinks are probably the most underrated, revolutionary invention of the last century. They are being eliminated for the sake of UI cleanliness. But at the cost of going back to darker times.
I think it is an extremely debilitating situation and it results in people not even knowing what a website is. What it consists of, or how one could possibly make one oneself. They would have to go straight to app development and have it in big tech's stores, in order to make anything their peers could see or use.