"The data you have given us is too valuable to let other people freely read it"
"Your web browser is rendering content in a way that we think is morally wrong"
It's just pathetic at this point.
"The data you have given us is too valuable to let other people freely read it"
"Your web browser is rendering content in a way that we think is morally wrong"
It's just pathetic at this point.
I miss the old internet, hanging out in irc channels, posting in small forums, wasting an afternoon jumping from niche site to niche site, trying to track where you were in a haze of dozens of browser windows.
A set of places, and people. True connection.
But even the modern web held some resemblance of that.
As many friends as I met in weird irc channels and niche forums, I met similar numbers on Twitter.
Now all those warm, welcoming places exist only in the past.
Part of me hopes we can recapture some of that...but I fear those days are gone. They were a beautiful bubble destined to pop.
Where once stood a diverse sprawling forest filled with mysteries now stands a managed woodland. Same raw materials, an entirely different experience.
We are not the same world. We are not the same people. Our relationship to this thing has changed.
I fully realize that I am getting older and nostalgic.
But I was once young, and naive, and truly believed this thing would save us.
To answer a common reply trend:
I clearly did a bad job at underlying the exact cause of my lament.
The reasons I left the communities I discussed is because they don't exist anymore - they were killed during a phase of the interenet that predated the rise of the proto-social networks like myspace and orkut.
Many were small hosted forums bought for beer money by startups that didn't survive the year. Others slowly dwindled into obscurity, as search engines directed people elsewhere.
When new communities formed they took a different form..."groups" and a little later subreddits, and much later on group chats.
The communities still exist, there are still awesome people doing awesome things. Some people still write blogs. Some people still maintain idiosyncratic websites unencumbered by decades of attention-driven UX "best practices". Sometimes a search engine might even recommend one.
But the ecosystem, that wonderful weird entangled world, is gone.
I do see (read: use a few forums that seem to hit your original) that sort of "decentralized" nonSEO sites that are high signal to noise ratio for the specific topic at hand.
I feel like the big mixing pot has hit the ground and the groups will "find" their new place in a smaller place.
@sarahjamielewis we were young and naïve back then too, but I definitely think #forums are due for a resurgence. I've been ringing this bell for years now after #CambridgeAnalytica broke, but this latest round of closing off the internet is just pushing more and more people away from walled gardens and closed platforms.
I'm hoping @nodebb (N.B. this is my #foss project) can lead the way on this, with a modern take on the tried and true #forum formula.
@sarahjamielewis I'm finding the Fediverse is pretty similar to that early-internet experience.
We have indeed changed though.
@sarahjamielewis That's actually a fascinating analogy because I think the cause is actually the same as what drives people to manage forests (well, humans have always managed forests in various ways but in the regimented modern way).
In general as organisational power has grown people have tried to make things more legible. This often requires immense simplification (and a suspicious number of rectilinear lines).
1/2
@sarahjamielewis unfortunately making something more legible often requires massive simplications and kills off diversity. A thing becomes easier to exploit in some way, in forests for lumber, in the internet adds/constant feeds/casual browsing but it also becomes much less resilient and often less enjoyable or useful to those that knew how to work with the old thing.
If you grew up with the confusing tangled mess of web 1 and early 2 what we have now is sterile and fragile by comparison.
@sarahjamielewis we can bring that back together...
@vantablack 's #FediPact [ https://fedipact.online ] and @aral 's #Web0Manifesto [ https://web0.small-web.org ] are just the first steps to end the #GAFAM-ruled #corporatocracy of the #Interwebz!
I used to hang out all the time on IRC [late 2000s to mid 2010s, recently got back into it]
I'd spend good 8+ hours a day in IRC even connecting my old BlackBerry to my ZNC bouncer so I could check in between classes