The field of social computing is moving towards a more community-centric approach, with a focus on crowdsourced context systems and decentralized governance. Researchers are exploring the potential of these systems to reshape the information ecosystem and promote more equitable decision-making. A key direction in this field is the development of frameworks and algorithms that can support the creation and maintenance of crowdsourced context, such as the use of plurality and prosocial utilities to increase equity and economic efficiency. Another important area of research is the investigation of the challenges and opportunities of community-run social media platforms, including the need for inter-community governance and the design of infrastructure to support it. Noteworthy papers in this area include: Beyond Community Notes, which develops a framework for understanding and building crowdsourced context systems. Fair Decisions through Plurality, which presents an alternative algorithm for increasing equity and economic efficiency in crowdfunding platforms. When Collaborative Maintenance Falls Short, which investigates the persistence of retracted papers on Wikipedia and highlights the need for better citation-level repair. Mind Your Ps and Qs, which introduces a novel moderation system that supports positive reinforcement in online communities. Governing Together, which proposes designing for inter-community governance and presents principles for supporting relationships and interactions between communities.