title: Disneyland au quotidien > We traded the open technology of RSS for Twitter and now we will pay the price of the anonymous corporate agents telling us what words we can read. > > We traded the World Wide Web and HTML for Facebook, and now you have to use your real name and they alone can decide who gets to see your words — unless you pay them for access to your own followers! > > We traded FTP for Instagram, and now you can’t show a woman’s breast (see #freethenipple). > > Ideas matter, words matter, and freedom of speech does not exist in a corporate setting by definition — and that’s OK. Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram can run their services how they like, and their interests are largely driven by revenue from sponsors based on growth. > > Disneyland is an idealized version of our lives, without dirt, smoking, hipster beards, and the homeless — and we pay a C-note each to go there for the day. We opt into Disneyland, but none of us live there every day. > > And that’s the key. We live in these services every day of our lives. > > Our lives are mitigated by Twitter and Facebook every day, and as this continues, our lives will feel like Disneyland: perfectly sanitized with an underlying tension that something isn’t right. > > *[Trading Open Standards for Corporate Ones](http://calacanis.com/2015/05/29/trading-open-standards-for-corporate-ones/)* ([cache](/david/cache/8c226756eba3fdd162e21abe5f350cfc/)) La comparaison est particulièrement pertinente.