@drq @iliazeus @mittorn
That's the point I'm making, people just moved on to more easily digestible platforms and microblogs in general. Maybe th public eventually expected every other platform to be commentable and interactive like microblogs and social networks, and they stopped reading and interacting with anything that didn't nteract immediately with them. So everything became a social network, apparently... :blobfoxo_o:
So then writers ended up either advertsing their blog on a microblog (and barely get anything), or just abandoned it in favour of microblogs and their kinds of posts.
Wordpress might just have been late to catch up.
@BigFoxBoss My point is not longform blogging being not easily digestible.
My point is standalone infrastructure being obtuse and not easily interactable without federation, there's no community.
As for "everything became social network", well... The first proper social network was Livejournal - there were friend subscriptions in there, as the prominent feature. And it was longform blogging platform, also the first one. So, always has been.
@iliazeus @mittorn