• kubica
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      437 months ago

      I guess they really needed to tell me I wasn’t welcome but damn.

    • @rifugee@lemmy.world
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      257 months ago

      Those are so infuriating. Especially when it’s for some random website that you’ll likely never have a reason to visit ever again. Does anyone actually subscribe? I highly doubt it, though who knows what old people do (I used to do end-user tech support and I’ve seen some shit). I’ve come across a couple of stores offer a small discount if you subscribe, which is at least a legit reason to do so, but this discount is so small that I even then I don’t bother.

      • SokathHisEyesOpen
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        187 months ago

        Surprisingly, yes. I have no idea why people put their email addresses in those things, but they do. I put a tiny email capture on one of my websites once as an experiment. I didn’t even offer anything, It just said “Keep in touch”, and thousands of people signed into an double opt-in mailing list in the 3 weeks I had it up. Fucking weirdos.

    • @30p87@feddit.de
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      227 months ago

      Bonus points if you had to enable JS beforehand because they load the content in via scripts afterwards.

      • @rar@discuss.online
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        277 months ago
        • 30 mb of JS for 1 kb of text.
        • Can’t zoom or scroll freely without JS interfering.
        • Double-click on a word and it calls another script for ‘assistance’ instead of selecting the word.
        • Right-click is disabled or bring their own ‘menu’ that does nothing.
        • @30p87@feddit.de
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          127 months ago

          Right-click is disabled or bring their own ‘menu’ that does nothing.

          Me trying to copy a link in discord web:

    • ditty
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      87 months ago

      And first thing when you open the page your browser prompts you to enable notifications for the site so they can spam ads that way too

      • @VieuxQueb@lemmy.ca
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        37 months ago

        I always wondered does anybody (with sane enough understanding of tech) accept notifications? It’s the one thing I hate the most, it triggers anxiety and takes my attention away from what I have to do.

  • @kwomp@sh.itjust.works
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    837 months ago

    I remember being all “omg great the internet will finally free information everything will be awesome” in like 2008.

    Then I read some Marxist analysis saying “nope, rather sooner than later the market principles, as the hegemonial/contemporary means of humans organizing themselves, will fuck it up and it will kinda suck lile everything else”

    I even remember that feeling of hope: “nah this time they’re wrong”.

    Turns out if you don’t change the political economy, shit trickles up into any nice social project.

    … also this is why I love niches like reddit (ba dum tss), feddit

    • @sbv@sh.itjust.works
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      357 months ago

      as the hegemonial/contemporary means of humans organizing themselves, will fuck it up and it will kinda suck lile everything else

      “What started the enshittification?” is a really interesting question.

      According to my biases, the original sin of the web was news orgs giving their content away for free. That led to “content from any site is trustworthy”, which led to the news orgs going bankrupt and the flailing attempts to return to profitability.

      Along the way, disinformation became a thing, and the primary motivator on the web became advertising.

      If we’d normalized paying for services, instead of monetizing user data, we would be in a better place.

      (Realistically we would have a different set of problems, but 🤷)

      • @kwomp@sh.itjust.works
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        157 months ago

        Interesting approach, gonna think about it. So far I didn’t take disinformation as a result of news companies going broke.

        Why would people forget that the BBC is more trustworthy then someones uncle, just because his opinion is for free? The distrust in “old authorities” like big newspaper or governments is, in my opinion, a long-term result of the broken promisses of the hegemony they are, or seem to be, part of.

        The concept “people have to have to pay for quality information” doesn’t sit right with me. Relevant info should be available for everyone! And trustworthy news orgs should be funded pubicly.

        • @sbv@sh.itjust.works
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          57 months ago

          I didn’t take disinformation as a result of news companies going broke.

          I don’t think it’s the only reason, but it’s one of the reasons.

          Part of the disinformation ecosystem is randos pumping out content so they can get ad clicks. Social media rewards that (etc), but the original sin is mixing timely investigative journalism with every other kind of free content online. It cheapens journalism.

          The distrust in “old authorities” like big newspaper or governments is, in my opinion, a long-term result of the broken promisses of the hegemony they are, or seem to be, part of.

          You’re right. And it’s somewhat deserved. But by training us that well-researched reporting should be free, those old authorities basically poisoned the well. We generally expect news to be free now. Which makes it really hard for new outfits to get started.

          The concept “people have to have to pay for quality information” doesn’t sit right with me. Relevant info should be available for everyone!

          Journalists need to eat. In the 1980s it seemed like almost every middle class household received a newspaper. I wasn’t able to find stats, but I suspect that most households found newspapers useful and could pay for them.

          If we return to a model where news isn’t free, but it’s really cheap, I think we’d be okay.

          And trustworthy news orgs should be funded pubicly.

          I’m all for public funding, but NPR didn’t break Watergate, nor did CBC break the SNC-Lavelin affair. Western democracies co-evolved with a relatively adversarial private press.

          We need ways for a private press to continue as we move further online. Non-profit models seem to work (at least for the Guardian), as do membership models (at least for Canadaland).

      • @azertyfun@sh.itjust.works
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        77 months ago

        Most websites started out free because the Web is very close to being “post-scarcity”.

        Running a simple but successful website used by tens of thousands of people can be done in your spare time for cheaper than a Spotify subscription. A hobbyist website about fishing with 10.000 monthly users can probably be hosted reliably enough for $10/mo, plus a few hours of work. Even if you value your time highly (say, $50/h), that’s still a “$200/mo” website (almost all of which is time you’re billing to yourself). The breakeven point is then at $0.02/monthly user (and the more users you have, the lower the cost per user, down to fractions of fractions of a cent for a really big text-based website).

        In that context it’s next to impossible to fairly pay for the service of running a text-based website. Payment processing costs are going to be, by far, the biggest share of the pie, which is ridiculous. So, advertisments and datamining it is (or was; datamining without explicit consent is at least illegal in the EU). Alternatively, donations (this is Twitch’s core business model, with which they’re even profitable in some markets, despite offering the most expensive service: realtime transcoded video).

        Of course a news website also has salaries to pay. That significantly shifts the balance in favor of “pay for the service”, unfortunately that runs counter to user expectations. Plus the historical context of traditional news orgs subsidizing their new websites with traditional revenue streams, then finding themselves cornered when the web turned out to be more than just a fad or a hobby.

        Another problem with additional revenue is feature bloat. Look at reddit, the website originally was actually really cheap to operate and was actually profitable on Reddit Gold alone (donations being a very common business model on the internet which IMO makes the most sense in most situations given the low costs).
        But they had to add an image host (sure, imgur was probably not happy to be footing the bill) as well as a video player (why?), chat service (where’s the business value?!), a brand-new but completely unoptimized front-end UI, a mobile app (despite third-party devs already offering superior options FOR FREE), etc.
        Reddit’s enshittification was caused by an overabundance of revenue from external investors asking for continuous growth, not from any inherent shortcoming in the original business plan. Same goes for pretty much every other enshittified website.

        • @sbv@sh.itjust.works
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          07 months ago

          Of course a news website also has salaries to pay. That significantly shifts the balance in favor of “pay for the service”, unfortunately that runs counter to user expectations. Plus the historical context of traditional news orgs subsidizing their new websites with traditional revenue streams, then finding themselves cornered when the web turned out to be more than just a fad or a hobby.

          Exactly this.

      • @Aceticon@lemmy.world
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        17 months ago

        I think it was the subversion of chains of trust by the kind of social media were people are linked to friends and family.

        For example, say that you’re connected to a cousin of yours in Facebook, somebody you know well as an excelent and honest person. Now, say they share this post about how lots of robberies in their neighbourhood have been traced back to youths in this other neighbourhood which is mainly of people from a different etnic group.

        Do you believe it? It comes from somebody who is an excellent and honest person, so you know they wouldn’t lie about something like this.

        At this point, anybody who actually thinks properly about the quality of information has figured out that just because somebody is honest doesn’t mean they tell the truth: they might be telling you something they genuinelly believe is true when it’s not because they themselves were decidved into thinking of it as true, whilst its not - in other word and simplifying it a bit, you can’t trust information from an honest person if they’re gullible, or even if they’re just prone to “spread the word” without having tought about it first (and the way things like Facebook are designed is exactly to induce people to share in response to an emotional reaction and without thinking)

        How many people do you know that really figure it out before sharing, or even worwe, did so back in the day before fake-news became a widelly talked about phenomenon?

        Add to this subversion of chains of trust that the fakest stuff is usually the most shocking and thus most likelly to be shared and you have this great way to spread misinformation in such a way that it keeps getting whitewashed as ot spreads thanks to preexisting trust in friends and family.

    • @almar_quigley@lemmy.world
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      -57 months ago

      lol, what the fuck even is this comment? 2008 the internet was already getting quite fucked. The internet setting information free idealization is all the way back in the 90’s. And I’m no capitalist apologist but communism ain’t gonna make the internet better.

      • @CriticalMiss@lemmy.world
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        227 months ago

        Shit gets worse over time, so every body remembers how when they first got access to the internet it was better. They’re not wrong, they just weren’t there for the usenet times.

      • @kwomp@sh.itjust.works
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        37 months ago

        You’re probably right I had been a bit behind regarding the discourse about the internet. I was in my early teenage years and just started knowing about it.

        And for your second claim: If you define communism the way I usually do (the social principle of coorperating to fulfill everyones needs), it seems likely the internet would be designed towards peoples needs, rather than companies profits. Of course it would still consume ressources to provide cat videos, but the required ressources might be less, since cooperating/sharing ressources is more efficient than competing.

  • AI is even worse. It takes over the biases and misinformation of the info it was trained on, shows these on its answers to users who pick up those biases and use them elsewhere on the net, what is then used to train AI. It’s all becoming a shitification loop.

      • @mob@sopuli.xyz
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        27 months ago

        While I agree with the sentiment, I’d imagine you can easily make the argument that written language is also for recording and documenting, not purely for human to human connection.

  • @grue@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    The meme is good, but the timeline is off. It was more like 2003 when websites didn’t suck. (Maybe earlier than that, even.)

    • @riodoro1@lemmy.world
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      207 months ago

      Yes but if you googled a product you could get to user written reviews instead of the manufacturer website claiming its the best shit ever made and ai written „reviews” citing the history of the brand.

      I honestly hate what internet has become

      • wander1236
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        127 months ago

        God forbid I get an actual solution to a Windows error I’m googling instead of every partition manager program telling me to buy it for some reason.

    • @madcaesar@lemmy.world
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      47 months ago

      Honestly that fucking box everywhere is worse. It should be a God damn setting in the browser not per page shit.

      • wander1236
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        47 months ago

        There are a few extensions that try to automatically handle different cookie popups with your pre-selected preferences. Consent-O-Matic is one.

      • @oldfart@lemm.ee
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        17 months ago

        It is a setting in a browser. In the early 2000s the browsers even came with their own built-in popups asking if you want to accept cookies from this domain. Of course this was annoying so everyone had it set to “accept all”, which then became the default and eventually disappeared.

        20 years later, some moron lawyer reinvented the same but worse.

  • @LogicalDrivel@sopuli.xyz
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    167 months ago

    I went to a site today that had a full page cookie popup. When I clicked manage cookies to disable, it presented me with a a choice of “eagerly interested” and “consent”. WTF is that? I didn’t see the opt out option right away so i just left the page.

  • Polar
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    147 months ago

    I mean no website back then was telling you to block them if you want. They just didn’t use javascript to detect blockers.

    Also web hosting has gone WAY up. My simple static website used to cost $5 per month to host. Now it’s $30 for the same spec server. The ones that are closer to $5 are so insanely oversold and slow, a website takes a good 30-45 seconds to load.

    • @oldfart@lemm.ee
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      107 months ago

      Unless you have millions of hits per month or your “static site” is Wordpress with a page builder, you might want to look into other web hosting offers. A VPS is overkill for a static site, and you can get a decent VPS for $10-$12 range. With enough bandwidth and io to host many static websites.

      • @Chobbes@lemmy.world
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        47 months ago

        You can easily host a static website on a dirt cheap VPS. The Hetzner ARM boxes are less than $5/mo with an IPv4 address and are going to be more than sufficient for the average static website… My website is on a cheap VPS with worse specs than the Hetzner ones and it does not take 30-45 seconds to load.

    • @CoderKat@lemm.ee
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      7 months ago

      A true static site can use GitHub Pages for free hosting (probably other options, too – never checked). That’s what I do for my ultra low traffic personal site (at least, I assume ultra low – I don’t install any tracking on principle). I pay for a domain and that’s it (and that’s just to look nicer, not actually necessary).

      • @meliaesc@lemmy.world
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        17 months ago

        I’ve being using Netlify, it’s really professionally feature rich, and the free tier is more than enough for my needs.

  • @Dumbkid@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    7 months ago

    Hell most sites back then didn’t even have mobile support yet and still used tons of flash elements, that was just the beginning of mass internet adoption due to smart phones

    • @Psythik@lemm.ee
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      67 months ago

      Man I got so excited when Flash finally came to Android. And then not that long after, Adobe announced that they’d be discontinuing it.

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    4 months ago

    deleted by creator

  • SokathHisEyesOpen
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    87 months ago

    Will you let us track literally everything you do?

    Yes! - I promise I’ll do it later

  • @mayo@lemmy.today
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    77 months ago

    There are more useful web apps than before but blog/affiliate sites are a plague.

    That said if I could make a ton of money by clogging up the internet with garbage content then I would. There is nothing holy about this place.