• @Rottcodd
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    1507 months ago

    How deliciously ironic that this is paywalled.

      • @[email protected]
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        47 months ago

        I’m a parent that grew up on the internet. Remember that many of us who grew up on ICQ and Geocities to Napster and the somethingawful forums and beyond are now approaching 40.

      • @[email protected]
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        7 months ago

        Today’s parents and grandparents are 1993’s internet kids. Some of us, anyway.

  • @Sanctus
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    7 months ago

    I miss the days of NewGrounds, Miniclip, and Kongregate.

  • @[email protected]
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    537 months ago

    Because it’s run by companies and not people like before. Because the original internet community grew and they prefer being in family and outside.

  • @[email protected]
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    357 months ago

    “Why the internet isn’t fun anymore” - proceeds to talk about Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and TikTok.

    Completely fails to mention any fediverse sites, or any of the millions of other sites out there.

    If you’re the author, the internet isn’t fun anymore because you don’t use it. You visit the corporate websites only. You either never learned how to use the internet, or you’re not interested in actually trying.

    Its like the person who never leaves their neighborhood and complains that life is boring.

      • @[email protected]
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        127 months ago

        AIM/MSN/Yahoo chatrooms. GeoCities. Neopets. Limewire, KaZaa, listening to Art Bell on the radio next to you while you search for the latest alien news and read ancient texts. Webrings. Message boards. NSA hadn’t partnered with Microsoft for the first version of PRISM.

        It was more decentralized, but even in the centralized parts there weren’t yet entire industries dedicated to stealing every last bit of dopamine from you to sell to the highest bidder.

        It was an amazing time. RIP 1985-2010

        • @[email protected]
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          27 months ago

          It was and it can still be, that’s why we are here. It will never be the same, we lost some amazing opportunities but we still need that connection, we still want to learn and build together. I don’t know what tomorrow will bring but at least as some of us want to try, this time being mindful of the corporate capture risk, we can do better and that’s exciting!

    • qevlarr
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      37 months ago

      Even worse when you realize it’s the job of these journalists to tell people there’s a whole world out there. The general public may not know about this, but if you’re a journalist making these claims, they should know better

  • @[email protected]
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    297 months ago

    The internet I grew up with and loved couldn’t survive having the whole population on it. It became about making money off the userbase, political manipulation, and addictive distractions. It’s success killed it.

  • @[email protected]
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    7 months ago

    Ask the people that had you put a paywall on the article, writers and editors of New Yorker!

  • mommykink
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    127 months ago

    Six corporations ruin everything.

  • THCDenton
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    67 months ago

    The internet is tons of fun

    • @SpacetimeMachine
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      37 months ago

      Don’t pretty much all modern .zip managers know to not open zip bombs anymore?

      • @[email protected]
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        17 months ago

        No, clicking on a zipfile make work a zip manager. But most AV identify the zip file as badware if it scan it. How many user scan downloaded files with an AV up to date, before open or use it? Or an atached file in the mail? Well, 42.zip is pretty known and you can download it from GitHub, but there are still zip bombs made and in use, even to eliminate AV protections, because it put the AV in a infinite loop in the intent to scan it, if it is a ZOD which isn’t in the definition base of the AV, blocking and overloading the system, because of this they are still dangerous.