Agreed but it's always important to remember that the internet is a tool for communication, education, and agitation but it's not a substitute for organising.
If we lose sight of this fact then we will end up no better than breadtube, which is the graveyard of praxis.
Just like how "there is no royal road to science, and only those who do not dread the fatiguing climb of its steep paths have a chance of gaining its luminous summits", the same applies to organising; it just takes work and it requires meeting people where they are, working to understand their concerns and the conditions they face, developing their consciousness, locating their struggles within a greater historical and social context, and helping each other to come to an understanding of the best way to approach these issues together then putting that into practice.