Everybody is a cinematographer these days, but nobody can write. Everyone is a master of graphic design, source code implementation, sound-file production (not necessarily music), video editing, and meme warfare, but nobody knows which "your" to use in a language they've been weeping in since birth.
And if you point it out, they think your being uptight.
This is a paradox in a society that is hung up on the resolution of and sound quality contained in YouTube videos. It is SOP for people who upload YT videos of "sub-par" resolution to actually apologize to their audience for their video quality, or the noise in the mic, while they aren't unlikely to resemble dyslexic glueheads every time they communicate via the written word.
In a society where everyone is a brilliant film director and record producer, why don't people extend their genius-grade standards of excellence to writing (including songwriting)? If everybody is Phil Spector and Stanley Kubrick, why isn't everybody William Shakespeare, Mark Twain, or Ernest Hemingway? Or even remotely literate at all, while nitpicking at some guy making videos from his kitchen, because his mic is quiet, and his cat is out of focus?
Is it because there isn't an app for basic language competence (or music comprehension)?
Just a thought.
Postscript:
I used the wrong "your" once, in a poem I wrote almost 20 years ago. I did it intentionally, as an act of rebellion against my own formal education. My education wasn't bad, it might have even been good, but I remember a linguistics class in which people were having a heated argument over serial commas. I believe in serial commas, but not enough to argue about it. If you don't want to use serial commas, you will annoy me, but I'm not going to waste a single syllable trying to convert you to the clearly-superior method of using them. The fact of the argument irritated me to the point that, when I wrote the poem "Zen AF" (before "AF" was a thing) at a rotten hotel in Hollywood, 6 years after earning my English degree, I used the wrong "your" as an intentional act of linguistic rebellion. In hindsight, the usage of the wrong "your" has become so ubiquitous, I believe it would be beneficial for everyone to sit through at least one heated argument about the microscopic minutiae of language, some time before they drop out of English class to join the brilliant glueheads in the sound-production and pixel-grinding app-mastering departments.
Thanks for listening.