Don't watch this if you're looking to get offended. There are many tidbits that may do just that, depending on your political affiliation.
You can skip to the main story here. The OP link is the whole episode, including commentary on Musk. It's interesting to watch that in light of this recent post: #895356.
I think watching this John Oliver video still may give interesting insights into the difficulty of content moderation. Of course, it ignores the approach that SN and NOSTR are trying to implement, but it paints a picture of what both these may encounter once/if they become big. Content moderation at scale is impossible some people say, so what will SN look like if/when it goes mainstream? People here are quite in tune with the approach of "just mute the person you don't want to hear/read", but we saw recently how targeted harassment by some members onto others was not a walk-in-the-park kind of event. Some people really got bothered, comment sections became a cesspool of @anon accounts targeting each other, and the quality of some discussions just went down the sewers. Common sense prevailed, and people learned quickly how to respond to this and not get bothered by it anymore. That's expected from early adopters. That was also FB's approach at its beginnings. It worked reasonably well. I had quite some fun out of it during the first few years looking at other students' profiles. FB still exists. It failed at content moderation, even before its recent change of policy to reduce the limited content moderation it did. It's an awful place to be now. What makes SN a better experience for me than NOSTR is that there is a clever game of incentives to promote good and thoughtful stuff rather than "GMs" shouts by OGs into NOSTR's void. In a sense, SN is doing some kind of community content moderation. I truly hope the fine-balancing game it does will keep working if/when it goes mainstream.
The video also is a fine example of what the MSM still gets wrong about what is going on with the world. Yet, it's good to consume content from both sides of the aisle, to escape whatever echo chamber you're in. Try to watch it with an open mind.