> On May 19, 2026, at 6:25 am, Roman Pronskiy <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Another data point: we have actual analytics on what platforms drive
> engagement to php.net. For April 2026:
> 
> | Social Network | Visits |  Share |
> |----------------|-------:|-------:|
> | YouTube        |  5,373 | 33.66% |
> | Reddit         |  2,915 | 18.26% |
> | X/Twitter      |  2,102 | 13.17% |
> | StackOverflow  |  2,068 | 12.96% |
> | Facebook       |  2,048 | 12.83% |
> | LinkedIn       |    675 |  4.23% |
> | Telegram       |    205 |  1.28% |
> | Hacker News    |    166 |  1.04% |
> | Vkontakte      |    154 |  0.96% |
> | Sourceforge    |     98 |  0.61% |
> | Instagram      |     58 |  0.36% |
> | Mastodon       |     37 |  0.23% |
> | Workplace      |     16 |  0.10% |
> | V2EX           |     15 |  0.09% |
> | Bluesky        |     14 |  0.09% |
> | Threads        |     12 |  0.08% |
> 
> Among text-based platforms suitable for project communications, X
> drives more traffic than LinkedIn and Mastodon combined. An active
> account would expand reach.
> 
> That's the kind of analysis the policy RFC encourages producing going
> forward: https://wiki.php.net/rfc/social-media-policy
> 
> -Roman

Thanks for the stats!

An average of 70 visits a day from X doesn’t seem like a ton of engagement 
though? I’m reasonably sure that figures from 2021 would be much much larger.

I believe that the era of town-square text social networks is over. There is no 
longer a single place where I can follow friends, colleagues, experts and funny 
people all in one place. Some of the exodus was a reaction to the Twitter 
acquisition, but a lot of it was just a general exhaustion from the dynamics 
that emerge from such systems.

X still has influence in Silicon Valley due to the large number of tech execs, 
AI companies and researchers, who continue to post there — but I don’t think 
there’s much overlap in audience.

Matt

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