Wanted to ask you about this article, how do you remember the early days of the internet (I was sadly too young at that time). Do you wish it back? And do you think it can ever be like that again? I would be very interested

  • rayman30@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Ah, the early days of the internet where every click on a link felt like you discovered something new and exciting. I remember making my own ‘homepage’ (with stats counter, most of the visits were my own), the dial-up modem’s noises, browsing open ftp servers to find interesting warez and generally not worrying about viruses.

    • Mechanismatic@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      You were excited to get email because it was almost always from a human being who put meaning and intent into their message. It was like getting a handwritten letter compared to all the random terms of service update emails from a service you haven’t used in four years and emails from a service you didn’t sign up for because someone else thinks your email address is their email address and the outright spam in the filter.

      • Prof Prachi Srivastava@masto.ai
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        1 year ago

        @Mechanismatic @rayman30

        Yes, agree and remember. I lived in very many different places in the late '90s and early 2000s. Often, the only method of communication was email. No landlines sometimes and certainly no cell phones.

        I can’t remember the last time I got a personal email. I get some rather lovely ones from my colleagues, but a personal email is a letter, and nearly as extinct.

      • Thaurin@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        And then my co-student refreshed the page a 1000 times for laughs and the counter went up, because I didn’t install a cookie with an IP check.

    • treadful@lemmy.zip
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      1 year ago

      Now everything is stuck in corporate silos and largely out of reach.

      I miss the somewhat more decentralized and anonymous nature of the early Internet and the Web. People were more likely to have their own Web site with their own shitty personal flare. Services were more infrastructure than ways to monetize the masses. Everyone was busy learning and trying out new things instead of just mindless content consumption or broadcasting their basic-assed opinion.

      Things seemed more substantial. But also anonymity granted people the ability to not be judged by their failures. So trying things was less personally risky and easier to fade away in time.

      Maybe I just got old. I would love to get back there, though.