i think we need Cracked-style articles back. desperately. or like, a guy doing a weird thing and writing a piece on it. sites like those are declining faster than the glaciers.

  • @Brkdncr
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    1252 months ago

    A lot of informational content is now in video format instead of text/photos. I can barely understand their poor English in those videos.

    • Dave.
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      642 months ago

      I can read and skim documents for salient details at 500 - 800 words per minute.

      And then someone links me to a twelve minute video on YouTube where 800 words are spoken in total , 300 of those words are “um,so”, and all we’re looking at is either the narrator , or possibly a static slide with a few paragraphs on it… and also an inset of the narrator, narrating.

      • Cethin
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        82 months ago

        You also can’t ctrl-f a video. It’s by far the worst format for information.

        • @[email protected]
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          32 months ago

          And in terms of actual information per kilobyte, it’s often absolutely laughable compared to text.

          Everyone’s using video for everything these days because that’s where the ad money is. Hooray, the tyranny of capitalism.

    • Rikudou_Sage
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      312 months ago

      Exactly this! My hearing problems don’t help the matter at all. Also they’re painfully slow - I read really fast and I rarely need a full intro to something, I usually hunt for a single piece of information in a whole article. Videos are stupid.

      • Ben Hur Horse Race
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        262 months ago

        whats up guys in todays video I’ll show you how to tie a shoe. First, remember to like and subscribe

        • @[email protected]
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          So today we’re going to learn how to tie a shoe. I like tying shoes, I tie a lot of shoes and I think other people tie shoes too, so I’m doing a video on tying shoes.

          Without further ado, let’s jump right in.

          So tying shoes is really important. Lots of people tie shoes every day and so it’s something that you need to know. So in this video we’re going to talk about tying shoes. If you want to learn how tie shoes you’re in the right place! We’re talking about tying shoes.

          So without further ado, let’s jump right in.

          So in this video we’re going to talk about tying shoes … [5 more minutes of talking without actually giving any information whatsoever]

          • @Boozilla
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            2 months ago

            This is so accurate. I end up hitting the 1-9 numbers keys to see at what chunk of the video they get to the real meat.

      • all-knight-party
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        -132 months ago

        I guess the catch is that I’d prefer to watch a video for information because the experience is better than the absolutely ad riddled text news sites.

    • @[email protected]
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      262 months ago

      It’s very easy to process an actual article and evaluate whether it actually does what I’m looking for enough to read it properly.

      Video doesn’t provide that. It’s a bad format unless what you’re doing is actually visual in nature. Reviewing a video game? Sure, provided you’re spending meaningful examples of the actual mechanics. Reviewing a video camera? Absolutely.

      If your video is just you talking at a camera, it almost definitely shouldn’t be a video.

    • @BitingChaos
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      82 months ago

      Googling so many “how do I do X?” type of questions have top-results of 10-minute videos where someone has their cluttered Desktop in full 1920x1080 and then they open the tiny command prompt in a small window (it’s clear they have no idea how to record a video), where they clumsily type commands they clearly don’t understand, and fumble through the entire process.

      I just needed a single command. It should have been a 1-second result at the top of search, not shitty videos or SEO dynamically-generated shit site that are trying to sell me something.

    • @hark
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      52 months ago

      I never thought I’d be one to watch videos at 2x but there’s so much “content” out there that it helps to get through it plus lots of videos are padded anyway.

  • Max-P
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    I miss the simplicity and the focus on the information due to the technical limitations.

    Websites just had the information, well presented. None of that blog spam with a massive story on how error code -21 could suck and seriously impact your business and that you should hire professionals. But anyway here’s a command copied from a 10 year old StackOverflow answer that hasn’t worked for 5 years and isn’t actually related to what you were Googling at all, but now you’ve viewed 3 advert videos, scrolled through 10 sponsored ads and closed 2 popups. Here’s the next article on error -22.

    Also, downloads were “here’s the link to it on our FTP server”, none of that guess which download button is the real one, waiting 30 seconds for the download to prepare and having to sign up for faster download speeds.

    • all-knight-party
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      192 months ago

      Unless you’re talking even earlier, I did a lot of guessing at which download button was real and downloading pirated games in many parts from shitty download services that only let you download one part per hour and such. In the late 2000s when I was old enough to really use the internet

      • Max-P
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        82 months ago

        Early 2000s dial-up. It enshittified quite a bit even that decade. Back then you had like a Pentium 3 with Windows 98, XP just came out but was for people with very good machines. Netscape was still there but dying, Opera was paid and the free version had an ad banner but the browser was actually good and not just a Chromium reskin, but most people had Internet Explorer 4 or 5. DSL was new and expensive. There just wasn’t all that much room to load ads, or even on screen: at 800x600, there’s not a ton of pixels to put ads on. You’d look at your jpegs slowly becoming less blurry.

        There was a time when even crack sites, it would just be like a list of cracks that just link to the exe and that was it. Sometimes there wasn’t a page, just an FTP directory listing go find what you’re looking for yourself. Of course there were popups and other crap but the web was just generally cleaner. Larger files were all P2P, it would already take you 15 minutes to download a single MP3 at those speeds.

        The centralization and need for monetization for storage and bandwidth came a bit later.

  • Dr. Moose
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    642 months ago

    Articles written for people not for search engines. I’m very familiar with SEO and you can see very clearly when article is created for ranking rather than movie readership. Unfortunately when 90% of traffic for many sources is Google you have no choice but to write articles this way.

    • @FinishingDutch
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      212 months ago

      God yes.

      I’m a professional writer for a newspaper. We’re also occasionally asked to put up SEO commercial text for our advertising partners. And good god, they look like they were written by a lobotomised monkey on a malfunctioning typewriter.

      • @Ejh3k
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        -212 months ago

        Are you not called journalists anymore? Or are you just lying?

        • @Z4XC
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          202 months ago

          One can write for newspaper and not be a journalist. Columnist for example.

          • @FinishingDutch
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            62 months ago

            In fact, at our newspaper only about a quarter of the writers are ‘real’ journalists with journalism degrees, including myself.

            From my personal experience (20 years in radio, 8 in newspapers), even most actual journalists don’t really call themselves journalists. I tend to refer to myself as a writer in general, since I also do commercial copy, I write reviews and handle all sorts of general writing and public contact.

            Journalist is not a protected job title. Anyone can call themselves a journalist. Even that other poster. Because of that, I tend not to use it as a job title, since it’s been devalued a bit by everyone with a blog or vlogging channel calling themselves journalist.

            I’m seriously wondering what the other poster’s point was…

          • @Ejh3k
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            -172 months ago

            Ah yes! The elusive columnist! None of those ever attended J school or are held to journalism standards. They can definitely print whatever the fuck they want without any sort of fact finding or double checking.

    • @triptrapper
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      162 months ago

      "We’ve all been there. You want to make a large batch of cookies for friends or family, but your KitchenAid stand mixer stopped working. When your KitchenAid stand mixer stops working, it inevitably leads to frustration. This is a common problem. Fortunately, there is a solution. I’ll show you a quick and easy way to fix your KitchenAid stand mixer when it stops working.

      Believe it or not, the first KitchenAid stand mixer was made way back in 1918…"

    • @A_Very_Big_Fan
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      This is one of the few cases where I think having an LLM bot straight up plagiarize an article is valid. They’re going out of their way to waste my time, so I’ll gladly have a bot lift the two sentences of the 20 paragraph article that actually answer the question.

      If they want ad revenue they can make articles for humans, or they can eat my entire ass.

      • Dr. Moose
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        22 months ago

        It’s often not up to publications but up to Google though. Finally Google is collapsing and taking all that spam with them.

        One of the main arguments against LLMs is that content creation on the web will dry up but 90% of content of the web is already inaccurate SEO garbage. Maybe accelerationists were right this time.

  • @SpeedLimit55
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    602 months ago

    Search engines with actual results, now every search is about trying to sell you something. Searching for a product used to pull up its manufacturer and specs, now its just where to buy it or something like it.

  • @DaddleDew
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    512 months ago

    Googling something and being able to find answers to your questions that you can actually trust instead of being fed a mixture of AI generated articles giving garbage information, ads disguised as articles and pages blatantly trying to sell you something.

    • Dave.
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      282 months ago

      "Hello I’m dgriffith, a community support member here at (official support forum) and I’m here to help.

      Have you tried formatting your hard drive and completely reinstalling your OS? That often helps when your icons are misaligned on the desktop.

      If this post helps, please mark it as useful, thanks!"

        • Dave.
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          122 months ago

          Every slightly unusual Windows issue that I research ends up at some Microsoft forum where this kind of post happens. Without fail.

          • Tippon
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            62 months ago

            I’ve genuinely seen a post where someone was looking for help because they had a problem with Windows and DISM /online /cleanup-image /restore health wouldn’t run, it said command not found.

            The marked answer from the ‘Microsoft representative’ was to run DISM /online /cleanup-image /restorehealth

      • @DaddleDew
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        These are bad too. But I was talking about those pages that show up on web results that when you consult them you realize that they’re just a bot-generated page that uses snippets of other pages it picked up on the internet, (badly) dressed up to look like an article written by someone. Often when you read through it you realize it repeats itself with conflicting information too.

    • @sep
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      52 months ago

      Adding before:2023 to the query helps on older stuff. For new stuff i have no idea, all i get is a torrent of SEO AI worthless junk.

      • Digitalprimate
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        12 months ago

        Going to try this, but can you even use operators like this on Google anymore in a any meaningful way?

  • Captain Aggravated
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    412 months ago

    There’s a certain scrappyness that has been lost. I think back to SomethingAwful, Newgrounds, that sort of stuff where people just made things, didn’t matter if they couldn’t draw, some of the best things were stick figure animations. Even on Youtube now people are doing ad reads to camera like a 1950’s talk show host.

    I also miss the sort of folk mythologies that emerged from what I like to call the Contextless Era. The Napster/Limewire explosion pre-iTunes led to a lot of things being shared with no context except for chronically incorrect file names. Which is why at least one person who reads this sentence still thinks System Of A Down wrote a song about the Legend of Zelda.

    I kinda miss the PC first internet. Just in general. I miss instant messenger clients. MSN, AIM and Yahoo! Facebook fucked it up. As Tom Scott once said, those style of messengers had the benefit of requiring users to log in, which meant being online was a signal you weren’t busy.

    • @Deway
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      62 months ago

      Link, he come to town!

      • Okami
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        12 months ago

        He come to save!

        • @Deway
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          22 months ago

          The princess Zelda!

      • Captain Aggravated
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        82 months ago

        Called it!

        No; the song - simply titled “Zelda” is from the album Rabbit Joint, by the band Rabbit Joint. Singer Joe Pleiman wrote the lyrics to the tune of the Hyrule Overture by Nintendo composer Koji Kondo.

        Back in the day, little known bands would attempt an early form of SEO, they’d put the names of more famous bands or artists in the file names of mp3s they would upload. Say you were an obscure (and for my purposes, fictional) metal band named Scorn Town, you might upload your newest track as “Blood of the Night - Scorn Town (metallica).mp3” to kind of trick Metallica fans into downloading and listening to your song.

        But you did a stupid: It’s one of those songs whose title isn’t in the lyrics, but you wrote the band’s name into the chorus because you’re trying to get people to know who you are. So people think the file name is of the pattern “Flagpole Sitta - I’m Not Sick But I’m Not Well (Harvey Danger).mp3”. Actual title - what you think the actual title is (band name).extension. So a lot of small time acts accidentally attributed their own songs to more famous groups by incorrect titles. Or their fans did it for them; any prank phone call skits were attributed to the Jerky Boys, and any white man performing stand-up comedy who was even slightly southern (especially Bill Engval) was credited as Jeff Foxworthy.

        And because this was the contextless era, no one even thinks to question this and if they do they don’t find anything because Scorn Town doesn’t and never will have a website and even if they did Alta Vista can’t find it. So it gets written into digital folk history at face value.

        Pleiman’s vocals did bear quite a resemblance to that of System of a Down’s Serj Tankian, and Chop Suey was HUGE at the time. And some unknown individual uploaded Zelda by Rabbit Joint to Napster with a file name similar to “SOAD - Legend Of Zelda.mp3.”

        Similarly, “The end of the world” aka “H’okay, so. Here’s the Earth, s’chillin…” was NOT made by Group X.

  • @FinishingDutch
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    412 months ago

    A lot of it boils down to the users. Personally, I miss when the internet mostly consisted of us nerds.

    Back in 1995 when I first got online, the web was very much a nerd domain. You needed a certain level of computer knowledge to get online, which really acted as a filter. It meant that most of us shared a certain level of understanding and the drive to use such a medium. We disagreed on Star Trek and Star Wars, but to the outside world, we were ALL nerds. Back then, the average person didn’t even think of going online.

    These days, even the most tech illiterate can get online. In fact, they don’t even think about it; it’s that integrated in their daily life.

    While growth also gave us nice things like large forums, web shopping, YouTube, etc… by and large I think we’d be better off if this was still a nerd domain.

    I really miss those days.

    • @[email protected]
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      22 months ago

      Heads up: Lemmy will either get less popular or more popular over time. Neither is ideal.

      And while it never feels like it when you say it, but these are [going to be] the good ol’ days.

      • @FinishingDutch
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        22 months ago

        Well that’s pretty much every platform’s lifecycle. Starts small, reaches a sweet spot and either implodes or sucks ass.

        I was on Digg, I had a MySpace page, I was an early Twitter user, I had a Reddit account… who knows how long I’ll be on here. But for now, I’m happy to be one of the users on the upswing.

    • @Ellecram
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      12 months ago

      Yes! My ex and I used to build all kinds of computers back then. Of course they used to blow up rather quickly. It was a slog trying to figure out where I left off once I got up and running again. Shopping - I bought all kinds of stuff on the internet back then lol. Enough said.

      • @FinishingDutch
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        22 months ago

        The early days of web shopping sure were interesting. I was a very early adopter compared to most people.

        The very first thing I ever bought online was a flashlight back in 1999. Which was such a novelty at the time that I actually visited the two guys who ran that shop from a literal broom closet in order to collect it. I was like their third customer ever. These days they have 75 employees and around 7 million euros of revenue.

        Collecting a web order seems silly now, but at that time it basically avoided a two week wait. Back in 1998-2005, if you bought something online in the Netherlands, you usually had to transfer the money by bank. Which took a few days. After that, they would send the product, which again took a few days.

        In 2005 we got a new online payment method that let you transfer the money immediately, much like paying at a register. That made it way more convenient for everyone and you saw massive increases in spending year over year.

    • @[email protected]
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      Don’t gatekeep the internet. That’s what lobbying ISPs and telecom companies are for. /s

      Update: Oh yeah, I forgot that Lemmy was filled to the brim with Linux nerds. The most-common nerd-gatekeepers, right before tabletop players. Explains the downvotes.

  • @RememberTheApollo_
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    392 months ago

    The creativity and willingness to share.

    Anyone could make a crappy site.

    Anyone could fire up some phpBB.

    People created a lot of stuff that mainstream commercial developers weren’t willing to invest time in. Think windows power toys, mp3 players or converters, game mods, all the little things that filled the gaps in mainstream OS and other software. Add the free stuff that people made like Blender or other specialized software that did what commercial software did but for free.

    Flash games.

    Linux distros.

    Hobbies and how-tos.

    There was so much stuff. Now it’s all mostly locked down under DRM or whatever.

  • Sentient Loom
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    372 months ago

    People having their own sites. I’m sick of everything happening on platforms (yes including this one). I want to visit someone’s place, not meet at the bar.

    • @[email protected]
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      132 months ago

      I’m dealing with this with my 10 year old daughter, all her friends have social media, Facebook Messenger etc.

      I found delta chat, which uses IMAP email, but presents it in a chat format, she just needed her friends email accounts, easy. And it killed the desire for messenger.

      We also recently setup her own website with a forum, so she and her friends can write stories, share images etc. We haven’t got to her actually building her own homepage yet, but it’s coming.

      She hasn’t experienced mass social media yet, so having her own (sub)domain with a forum, her email@domain, etc is exciting for her and is letting her express herself on a platform that me and her can both fully control.

    • batman without ears
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      22 months ago

      Technically lemmy is like people or groups having their own platform which can communicate with each other.

  • @[email protected]
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    342 months ago

    Sites in search results actually had the shit you were searching for. These days it’s scam bullshit or “removed” from the results. Otherwise I do kind of miss the old forum communities. Very little of that left anymore

  • @[email protected]
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    342 months ago

    We had rules that we pretty much all agreed on because we knew things would go badly if we didn’t.

    • Don’t feed the trolls
    • Don’t talk about internet memes in real life
    • Stay anonymous, there’s a bunch of freaks on the internet! Also, you’re one of them.
    • On the internet no one knows if you’re a dog

    There was a whole self-deprecating nature to it. We knew posting on the internet wasn’t really a positive activity. It was just a guilty pleasure. We knew it was all nonsense and nothing posted on the internet should be taken seriously.

    I remember when it first started cropping up where people were saying internet meme type things in public. Someone said “The internet is leaking, this won’t end well.”

    Didn’t realize how prophetic this was. Now not only do people feed the trolls, the trolls get paid really well through monetization. People have T-shirts with dumb internet memes, and awkwardly say them out loud thinking it’s cool. It’s so cringey.

    People shitpost under their own name and get super upset about being “cancelled”. Maybe you shoulda done that anonymously, dumbass?

    Identity is the most important thing to people on the internet now. Your identity matters more than your ideas now. It was better when we assumed everyone was a dog mashing on a keyboard and you had to explain out your ideas rather than ending discussion with sentiments around “you just can’t understand my experiences” rather than making an effort to explain them so others can understand.

    When it went from “we’re all losers trying to explain things to each other as best we can” to “we’re all wannabe celebrities that don’t have time to explain anything to the losers who aren’t good enough to understand our experiences” it all went to shit.

    • Sybil
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      22 months ago

      Identity is the most important thing to people on the internet now

      which is honestly and deeply confusing. because on the internet no one knows you’re a dog! (oh. you got back to that two sentences later)

      i just don’t go in for identity. at all. no one knows i’m a dog, and i like it that way.

      • @[email protected]
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        22 months ago

        Don’t get me wrong, identity is important. Even on the internet it can make sense in certain contexts like if you have a community for people of that group. There’s a time and a place for that.

        But in most contexts it’s really unimportant in internet conversations.

        But with the rise in social media it’s become the most important thing on the internet to the point where people can’t express ideas or accept an idea without it being connected to a person’s identity. Back in the day when everyone was pseudo-anonymous there was a death of the author kind of thing on everything so it was 100% about ideas and 0% about identity.

  • edric
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    332 months ago

    When sites were designed for desktop/landscape, instead of beig lazy and designing everything for mobile and not creating different desktop and mobile versions.

    Also, social media not trying to be everything. Nowadays, every social media is racing to be the all-in-one platform for microblogging, forums, short-form video, long-form video, etc. instead of focusing on the thing they were made for and do best.

    • @[email protected]
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      42 months ago

      Tbf that first one is more a result of web devs kinda slapping an “adjust for mobile/desktop” line into the page files to save time for other tasks the middle manager is breathing down their neck about

      • @[email protected]
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        52 months ago

        I think there might have been a secondary shift.

        Era 1: we have things like media queries or some unholy Javascript hoisting to adjust layout as the page size changes, But the site targets 1024 pixel wide or larger screens as the default and subtracts or hides items as it shrinks.

        Era 2: we kept the tools but assumed a 350-pixel wide phone is default. When you take it to a desktop, it reflows the text wider but doesn’t add back, for example, the menus that were hidden behind a hamburger icon on mobile.

  • @rwhitisissle
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    I miss the weird edginess of the internet. The reality is that the internet was a place that kids got warned about being full of weirdos and dangerous types. And they weren’t wrong. The thing is, that also made it interesting and full of fascinating content. And it was largely unregulated and uncensored because the people in power were too old to understand or care about it. Now with things like KOSA and the centralization of the internet around a few megaplatforms, there’s less variety and creativity. The internet has become an endless soup of banal, milquetoast content. Vaguely appealing to everyone, but not greatly appealing to anyone.

  • @NegentropicBoy
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    322 months ago

    A click got a page.

    Now you see spinny things getting content, the page jumps around, your mouse causes pop-ups to appear or the page to jump around even more. You start reading and the sentence is suddenly teleported to somewhere else.

    But apart from that I love the new internet!

    • @shyguyblue
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      112 months ago

      Every damn time i go to a fandom page, I have to wait a few seconds for the content to quit dancing around as it loads in whatever fandom garbage loads. We have height and width attributes for a reason!

  • @Smacks
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    292 months ago

    The creativity people were willing to share. Forums, DIY guides, blogs, neat yet crappy animations on Youtube. It’s all kind of still there, but it’s hard to find with how the internet is today.

    It was full of passionate people who made things because they enjoyed it. Now, it’s either how-to sites written by bots/keyboard monkeys, or you’re fast-tracked to the #1 video. You have to really go looking for the human now.