this post was submitted on 29 May 2025
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Invasive tracking and pay-for-play search engines has broken the internet. It’s time to reclaim our independence with the Small Web.

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[–] MudMan@fedia.io 77 points 2 days ago (6 children)

Who is "we"?

Technoactivists can't even get people to use free software when it works and there's like five of us over here in AP land.

Who is out there willing to create a movement to go back to navigating an page index or a webring? In what universe? Multiple governments freaked out about TikTok because the data was going to the bad spies they didn't like and they STILL couldn't get people off TikTok and into anywhere else.

I mean, if you have a time machine I'd happily blow up Skynet and tell 90s communication scholars that they were right about every single thing they were saying about search engines and algorithmic content, but that genie got out of the bottle, regained his freedom from the kindly street rat-turned-prince with his third wish and is halfway through Disney World by now.

[–] electricyarn@lemmy.world 11 points 2 days ago (3 children)

Hey I'd love to read sone of those 90s scholars you're talking about. Any suggestions?

[–] tarknassus@lemmy.world 3 points 2 days ago

Sherry Turkle’s book “Life on the Screen” was an amazing read back in 1997

The blurb:

Life on the Screen: Identity in the Age of the Internet is a book not about computers, but about people and how computers are causing us to reevaluate our identities in the age of the Internet. We are using life on the screen to engage in new ways of thinking about evolution, relationships, politics, sex, and the self. Life on the Screen traces a set of boundary negotiations, telling the story of the changing impact of the computer on our psychological lives and our evolving ideas about minds, bodies, and machines. What is emerging, Turkle says, is a new sense of identity—as decentered and multiple. She describes trends in computer design, in artificial intelligence, and in people’s experiences of virtual environments that confirm a dramatic shift in our notions of self, other, machine, and world. The computer emerges as an object that brings postmodernism down to earth.

A good look at the sociology and psychology of the early internet and how it has potential to impact in both positive and negative ways.

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