• @zeppo
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    341 year ago

    Wow, that was way ahead of its time for 1993. I remember in 1991 or so my dad showing me how he could connect to a library in Italy over the internet, maybe using Gopher or something. My reaction was ‘why tf would we want to do that? Sounds useless’. Not sure why, because in 1984 we had a Commodore 64 game with a big ad for People Link. I asked my mom if we could sign up because chatting with other people through a computer sounded awesome and she told me no, I’d get molested (also very forward-thinking).

    • FiveMacs
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      -31 year ago

      And now everyone shares the most personal intimate information publically then gets shocked when they are molested or their bank accounts drained or whatever…

      Critical thinking is no more for the majority.

      It’s actually kinda fun seeing what info you can get people to give you in person. Phishing is way to easy.

    • @[email protected]
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      71 year ago

      Less: they get a piece of paper with a drawing on it, which, unlike an NFT, might actually rise in value over time. Even if it doesn’t, they can doodle on the back of it or use it to wipe up a spill. Try to do that with a Bored Ape!