They never said it deteriorated so much that we’re back to square one. Would you still refuse if you were instead offered the internet of 6 years ago? I don’t think I would.
Comment on Sir Tim Berners-Lee doesn’t think AI will destroy the web
vermaterc@lemmy.ml 1 day agoHas it? If someone offered me access to the Internet from 20 years ago instead of access to today’s one, I would certainly refuse.
No GitHub? With all open source software in existence presented in a standardized way? No StackOverflow? With giantic knowledge base presented ad-free? No Fediverse? No vod streaming? No interactive weather apps? Guys, c’mon.
Nelots@piefed.zip 1 day ago
BertramDitore@lemmy.zip 1 day ago
To me it definitely has gotten much worse, though everyone’s internet experience is radically different. 20 years is too far back, definitely not. But 5 or 10 years? Absolutely.
I don’t have accounts on and completely ignore all social media other than this, and have all my ads blocked everywhere. I don’t use streaming services, so no exposure to ads there either. That all makes my web experience (and I’m sure most other Lemmy folks) arguably way cleaner and content-focused than the vast majority of people who just use the mainstream internet as it is.
And yet it’s pretty difficult to find out basic things, and I think that’s a very recent development. It has always been nontrivial to figure out what’s true and what’s not and sometimes you had to dig a bit. SEO did a great job of poisoning things before LLMs. But now? I feel like 99% of what I find is unconvincing and just bad, and the sheer volume of rehashed bullshit makes it super hard to find something useful, let alone something real and truthful.
capuccino@lemmy.world 1 day ago
We are in a social media app created exclusively to avoid the nowadays internet. That’s how is going on.
artyom@piefed.social 18 hours ago
I’m not in an app