The best solution is for everyone who disagrees with Twitter/FB/IG to nuke their accounts. Twitter dropped 5% yesterday. It's down 10% since friday. That's Billions, with a B, in value cost to the company. Fuck em. I hope their market value continues to take a shit on the way down. They deserve everything coming to them, and every time their stock price drops, zuckerberg and dorsey's net worth drops with it. Good. The less they're worth, the less influence and power they have. That's not a bad thing.
I don't particularly miss social media. Sure, I won't know which of my old high school girlfriends got fat or who thinks vaccines are the devil or that 737s pump out mind control chemtrails, but I guess I'll just have to be surprised if I ever make it to a reunion.
Your voice isn't really welcome on those platforms, anyway. Their engagement algorithms don't encourage a community of ideas; they reinforce whatever will keep you scrolling the longest. People like Zuck and Dorsey essentially built a highly addictive radicalizing echo chamber. Now they act shocked when the supercomputer pointed at reptile brains prompts reptilian responses to content. They've made the editorial decision that they'd rather have left leaning voices engaged in their echo chamber vice right-leaning. Whatever. That editorial decision has consequences, but it'll take time for those to play out.
I'd like the .gov to either treat them like utilities (AT&T doesn't give a fuck what you talk about until a warrant is involved), or (more preferably) go hands free and let a vertically integrated company scoop their right-leaning former users.
In the above scenario, though, there's a giant barrier to entry that someone with really deep pockets would have to attempt to overcome: The app store access and web-hosting services. It's a blatantly anti-competitive hurdle to market entry. The tech companies' over reach makes them ripe for the picking if/when the government swings the other way. It may not even need to swing too far; the left has a bone to pick (mostly in that they want more content moderation)...it only takes a few bones thrown in to get the right reps and senators on board and boom: the .gov just legislated half your valuation away. FB already has a history of anti-competitive behavior in scooping up competitors. Add de-platforming individuals to that, and you start getting a pretty sizable group with pitchforks and torches ready to go at it.
Microsoft learned the hard way; you can be the biggest kid on the block, but if uncle sugar decides you need knocked down a peg or two, he will swing the hammer til you submit.