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#creator-economy — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #creator-economy, aggregated by home.social.

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  1. ICYMI: YouTube's creator marketing playbook: numbers brands should not ignore: YouTube's May 2026 Creator Marketing Playbook publishes data on long-term ROAS, audience exclusivity, and AI-powered tools for brand-creator ad campaigns. ppc.land/youtubes-creator-mark #YouTubeMarketing #CreatorEconomy #DigitalMarketing #InfluencerMarketing #ContentCreation

  2. YouTube's creator marketing playbook: numbers brands should not ignore: YouTube's May 2026 Creator Marketing Playbook publishes data on long-term ROAS, audience exclusivity, and AI-powered tools for brand-creator ad campaigns. ppc.land/youtubes-creator-mark #YouTubeMarketing #CreatorEconomy #DigitalMarketing #BrandInfluencer #SocialMediaStrategy

  3. You type “Follow Me” every day. Now make it your brand. The smartest creator domains are short, memorable, and social-native.

    That’s why .FM works. Follow Me @ Get.fm

    #dotFM #FollowMe #CreatorEconomy #Creators #AIAudio #TikTokTips #TikTok #Instagram #Social

  4. Money Consciousness: Time-to-Value Collapse in a Money-Conscious World

    We are entering an era where effort, time, and reward no longer move together predictably.

    The digital economy is changing how value is created, distributed, and perceived.

    Link in first comment.

    Visual created with AI.

    #MoneyConsciousness #AttentionEconomy #DigitalEconomy #FutureOfWork #CreatorEconomy #ModernEconomics #AI #WritingCommunity

  5. The barrier to building software just hit zero. Welcome to the era of "vibe coding." 🧠

    For the last decade, the standard advice for anyone wanting to build a tech startup or a digital side hustle was simple: learn to code. Spend six months fighting with Python or React, build a buggy prototype, and hope for the best.

    That model is dead.

    We are seeing a massive shift in how software is built. Instead of writing syntax, creators are writing logic. "Vibe coding" is the process of using advanced AI models to spin up scripts, apps, and micro-SaaS tools entirely through natural language prompting.

    You describe the problem. You guide the architecture. The AI writes the code.

    Why does this matter? Because the bottleneck in the creator economy is no longer execution—it’s ideation.

    Indie hackers are currently using this workflow to build and monetize niche tools over a single weekend. They aren't bogged down by missing semicolons; they are focused purely on solving user pain points, testing distribution, and scaling revenue. 📈

    The competitive advantage has shifted from knowing how to build something to knowing what needs to be built.

    Are we looking at the end of traditional entry-level development, or is this just the ultimate productivity tool for creators?

    Drop your thoughts below. 👇

    Read the full breakdown on how creators are monetizing this shift:
    digiglitch.net/5wty

    #BuildInPublic #MicroSaaS #CreatorEconomy #ArtificialIntelligence #TechTrends

  6. Your "viral formula" is broken. 🥱 Stop chasing trends. Stick to a unique POV + deep research + radical authenticity. That’s the real growth fuel. What's your core pillar? 👇 #CreatorEconomy #SocialMedia #BuildInPublic

    Ditch the Playbook: The Real F...

  7. Our mid-tour report on IShowSpeed’s Caribbean circuit shows unprecedented AI visibility.

    With coverage from major media outlets and a massive surge in AI engine citations.

    Conclusion to follow. > The final report arrives at tour’s end. Expanded insights. Measured impact. Community quantified.

    #CreatorEconomy #AISearch #SchedraLabs #IShowSpeed #DataAnalytics

  8. Anti-Competition by Design

    By Cliff Potts, CSO, and Editor-in-Chief of WPS News

    Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines — May 6, 2026

    Competition is what keeps markets honest. When users can move freely, platforms must earn loyalty through better service. On X, that freedom has narrowed. The system increasingly rewards staying inside one ecosystem and quietly punishes anyone who tries to operate outside it.

    This essay explains how that design works and why it harms Filipino creators, journalists, and small businesses.

    How Lock-In Replaces Competition

    Healthy platforms compete for users by improving tools, reliability, and trust. Unhealthy ones compete by making exit costly.

    On X, creators who post links to outside sites often see reduced reach. Accounts that encourage audiences to follow them elsewhere grow more slowly. Over time, users learn an unspoken rule: keep everything inside the platform or accept penalties.

    This is not open competition. It is enforced dependence.

    Why This Matters More in the Philippines

    Filipino creators rarely rely on a single income source. Many combine writing, freelancing, donations, and small online sales. That requires moving audiences between platforms.

    When one platform blocks that movement, it blocks income. A creator may have followers, but no way to convert that attention into support elsewhere. The platform keeps the audience. The creator carries the risk.

    This imbalance is especially damaging in lower-income markets.

    Small Businesses Face the Same Wall

    Local businesses use social media to reach customers, then send them to websites, booking pages, or messaging apps. When those links are suppressed, business slows.

    Owners often do not know why traffic drops. They blame themselves, not the platform. Meanwhile, the platform keeps users scrolling instead of buying.

    Anti-competitive design is most effective when it is quiet.

    Choice Without Real Freedom

    Supporters often argue that users can leave at any time. In theory, that is true. In practice, audiences are locked in.

    Years of work, followers, and reputation are tied to one system. Leaving means starting over. Staying means accepting rules that favor the platform over the user.

    That is not free choice. It is constrained choice.

    Why This Is a Business Failure

    Markets grow when value flows in many directions. Platforms that block movement limit growth for everyone except themselves.

    For Filipino users, this means fewer options, lower income, and higher risk. For the platform, it means declining trust and long-term instability.

    Anti-competition may protect control in the short term, but it weakens the ecosystem over time.

    Looking Ahead

    The next essay will examine how these same design choices affect advertisers and why many brands avoid platforms with unpredictable and restrictive behavior.

    When competition is designed out of the system, users always pay the price.

    For more social commentary, please see Occupy 2.5 at https://Occupy25.com

    This essay will be archived in the WPS News Archives at Amazon.

    References (APA)

    European Commission. (2023). Digital Markets Act and platform competition. https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu

    Electronic Frontier Foundation. (2023). Competition and platform lock-in. https://www.eff.org

    Reuters. (2024). Brands rethink spending on X amid policy changes. https://www.reuters.com

    #anticompetition #creatorEconomy #digitalMarkets #internetPlatforms #marketPower #onlineIncome #Philippines #platformEconomics #smallBusinesses #socialMediaPlatforms #Twitter #XPlatform
  9. Creators treating daily posting as a growth hack hit a treadmill: effort rises, impact stalls. Replacing the manual loop with an AI-driven pipeline shifts the role from doing to orchestrating. By mapping ideation, creation, distribution, analysis into staged workflows and letting a workflow engine trigger each step, consistency scales while strategy stays human, reducing burnout. 🤖 #ContentAutomation #AI #Workflow #CreatorEconomy - Powered by FG

  10. Move like you already have the team you’re planning to hire. 🧠

    Before you start, write today’s 3 moves:

    CEO move: big picture (grants, partnerships, sync)
    Artist move: make/ship (music, content)
    Brand move: build equity (footwear, Patreon, email)
    Knock those 3 off first—then everything else. That’s how you level from hustle to a scalable business. Save this. Comment “DONE” when you finish yours today.

    #CreatorEconomy #MusicBusiness #BrandStrategy #IndieArtist #Entrepreneurship

  11. Burnout isn’t the bottleneck; the architecture is. When creators embed an AI persona into automation tools ⚙️ like n8n, Make or Zapier, content generation becomes a continuous, repeatable process independent of any one schedule. The human shifts to strategic oversight while the system supplies constant metrics and scale. #AI #Automation #CreatorEconomy #SystemsDesign - Powered by FG

  12. When Platforms Punish External Links

    By Cliff Potts, CSO, and Editor-in-Chief of WPS News

    Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines — April 22, 2026

    For many Filipinos, publishing online does not stop at one platform. Writers link to their blogs. Journalists link to news sites. Small businesses link to stores and booking pages. On X, that basic behavior often comes with a cost.

    This essay looks at how suppressing external links works as a business practice, and why it harms Filipino creators, journalists, and small businesses.

    Links Are the Internet’s Core Feature

    Links are how the internet was built. They let readers move freely from one place to another. They allow creators to own their work and grow audiences beyond any single platform.

    When platforms respect links, users can build real value. When platforms punish links, users are trapped inside one system. That choice changes the internet from an open network into a closed funnel.

    What Link Suppression Looks Like in Practice

    Many users report the same pattern. Posts with external links get fewer views. Replies with links travel less. Accounts that regularly point people elsewhere lose reach over time.

    The platform rarely explains these changes. There is no clear notice and no appeal. The message is indirect but clear: stay inside the ecosystem or accept reduced visibility.

    This behavior is not random. It is repeatable.

    Why This Is an Anti-Competition Move

    When a platform discourages links to outside sites, it is protecting itself from competition. Readers are kept from leaving. Creators are pushed to publish only where the platform controls attention and data.

    For Filipino users, this is especially damaging. Many rely on outside websites for income, donations, or sales. When links are suppressed, earnings drop. Growth stalls.

    This is not about quality. It is about control.

    The Impact on Filipino Journalism

    Independent journalism in the Philippines depends on links. Reporters need to share full stories, sources, and documents. When those links are buried, news struggles to reach readers.

    Large outlets may survive. Small and local ones often do not. Link suppression quietly weakens public information while claiming to protect “engagement.”

    A platform that harms news access harms democracy and business at the same time.

    Why Creators Feel Forced to Choose

    Creators should be able to publish anywhere. On platforms that punish links, they are pushed to choose between visibility and independence.

    Some stay and give up outside publishing. Others leave and lose their audience. Either way, the platform wins control while users lose options.

    That is not a healthy market. It is lock-in by design.

    Looking Ahead

    The next essay will examine how these same systems shape advertising behavior and why many brands avoid platforms with unpredictable rules.

    When links are treated as threats, the platform is no longer open.
    It is defensive.

    For more social commentary, please see Occupy 2.5 at https://Occupy25.com

    This essay will be archived in the WPS News Archives at Amazon.

    References (APA)

    Electronic Frontier Foundation. (2023). Platform power and link suppression. https://www.eff.org

    Reuters. (2023). X limits visibility of posts with external links. https://www.reuters.com

    World Wide Web Consortium. (2022). Principles of a decentralized web. https://www.w3.org

    #anticompetition #creatorEconomy #digitalPublishing #internetFreedom #linkSuppression #mediaSustainability #onlineJournalism #Philippines #platformEconomics #smallBusinesses #socialMediaPlatforms #Twitter #XPlatform
  13. new piece on why AI is actually making the case for the open web stronger, not weaker:

    AI-generated content is growing faster than platforms can reliably filter it.

    but the same tools are also lowering the operational cost of running your own infrastructure dramatically.

    Ghost + email + ActivityPub. a federated identity that no platform can absorb or redirect. content that persists when algorithms change and platforms shut features down.

    the open web isn't the alternative to AI-era platforms. it's the infrastructure built to outlast them.

    federatedmind.com/the-reason-a

    follow us here: @federatedmind

    #OpenWeb #Fediverse #ActivityPub #GhostCMS #CreatorEconomy #AI #IndiePublishing #OwnedMedia #SelfHosting

  14. Creator success now hinges on an AI-driven monetization pipeline, not raw likes. By automatically capturing every interaction, scoring leads with data-backed models, and delivering personalized nurture flows, creators turn attention into predictable revenue. The system scales without extra workload, turning sporadic engagement into a steady income stream. #CreatorEconomy #AI #Monetization - Powered by FG