What Happened to Cyberspace?
Christopher De Vries
August 24, 2019
It used to annoy me when people talked about going online as something
separate from the "real world." I always thought of the Internet as part of
the real world, and as a college student in the early 90s and a graduate
student in the late 90s, the Internet was a tool I used on a daily basis.
I hadn't thought too much about the Internet of my youth until I saw the
documentary Warren Ellis: Captured Ghosts a few nights ago. It reminded me
of a time when I used to frequent Ellis's Die Puny Humans website, and
slashdot. Die Puny Humans is gone, though snapshots
are still available on
the wayback machine.
Slashdot is still around, but it seems to be a shadow
of its former self. These days, there are several replacements for these
cultural aggregation sites. Places like BoingBoing,
Fark, Digg, and
reddit. These sites seem to offer similar services,
aggregations, often by users, of cultural material for wider dissemination and
discussion, but the results seem somewhat muted compared to the posts of 20 or
even 10 years ago. The wonder of discovery replaced by a more cynical attempt
to be the first to point to the latest dumpster fire. Part of it may be that
the destinations are always the same. Links go to
Facebook, Twitter, major
news sites, Medium and few other major websites. The
personal blogs and small companies so often brought down by slashdotting* are
now very rare.
So now, the Internet is very much like the "real world" I always thought it
was a part of. Dominated by a few large corporate and news sites who control
the commons. Even relatively independent media sites link to these
large players. Google once helped maintain a diverse
ecosystem of websites between its now vestigial webmaster
tools, which seems to focus completely
on SEO, and its once popular, but discontinued feed
reader which helped users keep tabs on
content from the blogs they follow.
The IndieWeb is working to recapture these older
times. Encouraging people to eschew social media sites and instead publish
their own blogs again. It's a lofty goal, but much of the tooling seems to be
based on the idea that your blog becomes a backup for posts syndicated into
the corporate social media landscape. Without such syndication how
would anyone find a blog these days?
I miss the old days. I miss the transient communities we had. I miss the time
when the Internet was cyberspace.
Discussion in the ATmosphere