On 12/22/23 18:47, Ben Collver wrote:
> # Splitting the Web by Ploum on 2023-08-01
>
> There's an increasing chasm dividing the modern web. On one side, the
> commercial, monopolies-riddled, media-adored web. A web which has
> only one objective: making us click. It measures clicks, optimises
> clicks, generates clicks. It gathers as much information as it could
> about us and spams every second of our life with ads, beep,
> notifications, vibrations, blinking LEDs, background music and
> fluorescent titles.
>
> A web which boils down to Idiocracy in a Blade Runner landscape, a
> complete cyberpunk dystopia.
>
> Then there's the tech-savvy web. People who install adblockers or
> alternative browsers. People who try alternative networks such as
> Mastodon or, God forbid, Gemini. People who poke fun at the modern
> web by building true HTML and JavaScript-less pages.
>
> Between those two extremes, the gap is widening. You have to choose
> your camp. When browsing on the "normal web", it is increasingly
> required to disable at least part of your antifeatures-blockers to
> access content.
>
> Most of the time, I don't bother anymore. The link I clicked doesn't
> open or is wrangled? Yep, I'm probably blocking some important
> third-party JavaScript. No, I don't care. I've too much to read on a
> day anyway. More time for something else. I'm currently using
>
kagi.com as my main search engine on the web. And
kagi.com comes with
> a nice feature, a "non-commercial lens" (which is somewhat ironic
> given the fact that Kagi is, itself, a commercial search engine). It
> means it will try to deprioritize highly commercial contents. I can
> also deprioritize manually some domains. Like
facebook.com or
>
linkedin.com. If you post there, I'm less likely to read you. I've
> not even talked about the few times I use
marginalia.nu.
>
> Something strange is happening: it's not only a part of the web which
> is disappearing for me. As I'm blocking completely google analytics,
> every Facebook domain and any analytics I can, I'm also disappearing
> for them. I don't see them and they don't see me!
>
> Think about it! That whole "MBA, designers and marketers web" is now
> optimised thanks to analytics describing people who don't block
> analytics (and bots pretending to be those people). Each day, I feel
> more disconnected from that part of the web.
>
> When really needed, dealing with those websites is so nerve breaking
> that I often resort to... a phone call or a simple email. I signed my
> mobile phone contract by exchanging emails with a real person because
> the signup was not working. I phone to book hotels when it is not
> straightforward to do it in the web interface or if creating an
> account is required. I hate talking on the phone but it saves me a
> lot of time and stress. I also walk or cycle to stores instead of
> ordering online. Which allows me to get advice and to exchange
> defective items without dealing with the post office.
>
> Despite breaking up with what seems to be "The Web", I've never
> received so many emails commenting my blog posts. I rarely had as
> many interesting online conversations as I have on Mastodon. I've
> tens of really insightful contents to read every day in my RSS feeds,
> on Gemini, on Hacker News, on Mastodon. And, incredibly, a lot of
> them are on very minimalists and usable blogs. The funny thing is
> that when non-tech users see my blog or those I'm reading, they
> spontaneously tell me how beautiful and usable they are. It's a bit
> like all those layers of JavaScript and flashy css have been used
> against usability, against them. Against us. It's a bit like real
> users never cared about "cool designs" and only wanted something
> simple.
>
> It feels like everyone is now choosing its side. You can't stay in
> the middle anymore. You are either dedicating all your CPU cycles to
> run JavaScript tracking you or walking away from the big monopolies.
> You are either being paid to build huge advertising billboards on top
> of yet another framework or you are handcrafting HTML.
>
> Maybe the web is not dying. Maybe the web is only splitting itself in
> two.
>
> You know that famous "dark web" that journalists crave to write
> about? (at my request, one journalist once told me what "dark web"
> meant to him and it was "websites not easily accessible through a
> Google search".) Well, sometimes I feel like I'm part of that "dark
> web". Not to buy drugs or hire hitmen. No! It's only to have a place
> where I can have discussions without being spied and interrupted by
> ads.
>
> But, increasingly, I feel less and less like an outsider.
>
> It's not me. It's people living for and by advertising who are the
> outsiders. They are the one destroying everything they touch,
> including the planet. They are the sick psychos and I don't want them
> in my life anymore. Are we splitting from those
> click-conversion-funnel-obsessed weirdos? Good riddance! Have fun
> with them.
>
> But if you want to jump ship, now is the time to get back to the
> simple web. Welcome back aboard!
>
> From: <
https://ploum.net/2023-08-01-splitting-the-web.html>
Cross-posting to specific communities it would interest. Original thread
in comp.misc. (Is this against Usenet etiquette?)