It seems like having a website open and available on the internet is getting practically impossible to manage, with bots accounting for more and more traffic. AI has gotten to a point where it can circumvent just about any form of captcha, sooooo, what? Does "the internet just get abandoned in favor of some other, better technology that we hope crops up? Does it fade away? Do the real nerds start their own separate internet, and not let companies in? I donno, food for thought I guess.

  • SanctimoniousApe@lemmings.world
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    29 days ago

    There will be two internets: the first will require proof of identity and everything you do will be tied to that identity - forget anonymity forever. The second will be an “underground” one that is significantly more difficult for the average idiot to get onto. It’ll use wherever replaces TOR since TOR is known to be vulnerable to tracking as well. There will be complete anarchy, and it’ll be a real PITA to do anything. Nobody & no site will be trustworthy, and you’ll have to exchange encryption keys & whatnot offline IRL with anyone you want to communicate with in a vaguely trustworthy fashion.

    You read about Digg, didn’t you?

  • ComradeSharkfucker@lemmy.ml
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    29 days ago

    where does it go from here?

    Places like this. There is no real alternative, this is the best we currently have. Unless you want to overthrow the capitalist world order which I am admittedly in favor of.

      • Ashtear@piefed.social
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        29 days ago

        Mhm, the moment the Fediverse hits a critical mass it’s coming. Maybe it’ll stay small enough to avoid it, but it’s probably already here to some degree.

        Why I started investing more energy in live chat. Harder to bot synchronously.

        • OwOarchist@pawb.social
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          29 days ago

          we don’t have anything else except interacting irl

          And we are not desperate enough to resort to that!

          • ByteJunk@lemmy.world
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            29 days ago

            Oh dear no. Talking to someone face to face like some primitive caveman? Dear lord, I’d rather be a hermit.

            * goes back to painting his cavern wall *

  • jtrek@startrek.website
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    29 days ago

    I imagine you could do something with chains of trust. You trust yourself. You trust your friend you know in real life. To a lesser extent you trust people he trusts. But then one of them turns out to suck or be a bot, so now you trust your friend less.

    • MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
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      29 days ago

      I want that nice middle ground 90’s-2000’s 'net:

      There was a lot of weird stuff, there was scary places, but general browsing and surfing wouldn’t USUALLY suddenly hit you with some NSFL / CSAM stuff that made you wish your brain had a “bleach port.”

      Stuff like TOR is really cool in theory, and absolutely necessary, but it still has that back-alley “Don’t stray from the street lamps and guide posts and trust no one.” vibe. Definitely not a place one can (easily) go around making friends.

      That’s why I just enjoyed watching Mutahar surf it, since he knows what he’s doing lol.

      I’m curious if people tend to use i2p as much.

      And then there’s that pesky network effect, of course: Secretive places on the web might finally break free of the corporate net, but the non-criminals inhabiting it will likely be those already deep into sweaty nerdery and a definite non-zero chance of untreated schizophrenia.

      But, yeah, make something too accessible and it gets Eternal September’d into yet another extension of corporate / state hegemony…

      I’m deeply invested in where we go from here, and how to make that future brighter as opposed to following the downward trend…

    • WhiteOakBayou@lemmy.world
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      29 days ago

      Everyone start using project gemini (obviously Google named it’s AI that because we were getting too popular. The slow and small Internet is what we want. Be the change. Write weird blog posts pseudonymously

  • Libb@piefed.social
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    29 days ago

    It seems like having a website open and available on the internet is getting practically impossible to manage,

    What are the issues you’re facing?

    with bots accounting for more and more traffic.

    Can’t you just ignore them?

    AI has gotten to a point where it can circumvent just about any form of captcha, sooooo, what?

    Not sure I understand that.

    Does “the internet just get abandoned in favor of some other, better technology that we hope crops up? Does it fade away? Do the real nerds start their own separate internet, and not let companies in? I donno, food for thought I guess.

    Technology will not be the solution to what is partly at least already a technological issue. Or more precisely, no tech can solve the way we poorly handle tech. That needs to change first.

    The living Web you mention was a curated Web. Human curation, that is.

    People used to share information and to promote sites and content from other sites to their own readers because they considered it worthwhile of their time and attention. That’s good curation. ‘Read this, guys, I think it’s worth it’.

    And at times, that was truly amazing. As far as I’m concerned, that was the peak ‘Web’, the one I was the most happy with and the most proud to be part of.

    Then, blogging started to become trendy. Blogging was an impressive technological breakthrough, making it instantly simpler for anyone without any expertise to

    1. Publish content without any need to master complex tools (I created my first website learning to write HTML and then CSS, there was no PHP or javascript back then)
    2. Share content from elsewhere. It was dead simple to share a link, to ping other websites.
    3. And, obviously, to post comments everywhere too.

    Trendy bloggers started monetizing the hell out of every single bit of content they published, and the crowd of bloggers followed suit. Through ads and partnerships content publication and curation itself, that used to be about caring about our readers, became a bankable practice. That means there quickly was a demand for even more tech to make it even simpler/cheaper to publish (and also to show ads). Next to that there was also SEO growing in importance: more content and more demand required ways to optimize placement in search results so we could sell more ads, right? More tech needed.

    And then social networks started appearing.

    They were even simpler than blogging. Incredibly much simpler. Quickly, thx to social media, sharing content went ballistic. And then that was all that mattered: poop out as much content as possible. Even more tech was required (tech to automate it, to cross post it, to re-post, to share and to reply, and so on). Even commenting became too much work, that need to be reduced in order to be worth it, it was too slow, we started using a new tech: ‘Likes’. Almost instant. No need to write stupid words anymore, just press a button. Like or Dislike, that was all that was needed, even more so that there was so much endless content that was pushed down reader’s throat they would not possibly have any time left to, you know, write anything.

    Gone were the desire to share useful or interesting content with readers, and for readers to contribute back some content through comments. Here comes the time to milk that reader, and their attention.

    A reader that had suddenly morphed into a ‘follower’, the 21st century cattle (like with cattle, all that matter on social media is the number of heads/followers one owns and can monetize). The time to abuse the curation mechanism by promoting whatever shit was susceptible to generate revenues. hence the explosion of low quality posts. Quick, let’s make a 15 second video about the war somewhere, or that fact that I hate a tuna sandwich for lunch.

    Soon there will not even be that left as everything, every once of content, may well be AI-made without any human involved. Content that will be perfectly and algorithmically tailored to suit every single reader/follower (happy cattle, with it s own unique tag different from all the other cows that are being being milked at the same time they are).

    But the ‘living’ Web, that human-curated source of content is still available on the WWW. It survives next to those huge factories constantly pooping content that most people seem so hungry to consume from. It may vanish, rendered illegal by those poop-content factories that don’t want no interferences with their businesses, but it is still a thing today.

    I doubt creating a new Internet will change that.

    What need to change is… I don’t know… the way they are being educated and encouraged in being lazy as fuck? The way we consider and we use technology as a magical wand to solve all our needs and fears? Something like that.

    And sorry for the long rant.

    Edit: (too many) typos

    • Tuuktuuk@nord.pub
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      29 days ago

      with bots accounting for more and more traffic.

      Can’t you just ignore them?

      You have to pay for the traffic and the bot traffic can easily comprise 99 % of your site’s traffic. It is a huge increase in costs you need to bear. Even if you build a site for 50 people, you may end up paying the costs of a site for 10 000 users.

      There are ways to mitigate this – otherwise hosting an instance of PieFed of Lemmy would be simply impossible, but it does take extra skills, and it’s very bad if you don’t know about this problem beforehand!

      • Libb@piefed.social
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        29 days ago

        As a matter of fact the (small French) host I’m using to host my tiny personal blog is giving me a more than generous data allowance as I’ve yet to have any issue. Or maybe it’s just that my blog is so useless that it’s not even deemed worthy of a bot’s attention?

        More seriously, I had not considered that aspect. It sure is not a detail. And that is something I’ll discuss with my host to get his opinion on the question (he must be a lot more informed on that issue). That is another advantage of making business with a local company: there are actual people once can talk to, not AI-powered bots ;)

        Edit: & thx for the explanation.

      • MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
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        29 days ago

        Is this even for static sites? Geeze, that sounds awful. I’ve been getting really excited about starting up an “indie web” site and enjoying that HTML/CSS digital gardening I was way too ADHD to get in on in the early 00’s…

  • Zachariah@lemmy.world
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    29 days ago

    I could see, eventually, a public key reputation system where content is signed and you can filter what’s coming at you to just keys you trust, keys your friends trust, however many Kevin Bacon’s of separation you want, or just the entire firehose.

    Society will have to get better at managing their private keys first. And then publishing tools will need to bake in signing features.

    • CombatWombat@feddit.online
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      29 days ago

      You can give unlimited upvotes but you earn one downvote per post or comment to give to another post or comment (so you can always downvote if you explain).

      • confusedwiseman@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        29 days ago

        Voting seems to have the objective of popular/good rising, the mediocre staying in place, and moving down the “junk”.

        Are you suggesting just get rid of voting and replace with nothing or is there something better?

        • FaceDeer@fedia.io
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          29 days ago

          I’m thinking I’d like to try doing without it. The Fediverse isn’t so large yet that it’s really needed, maybe later when theres’ multi-thousand-comment threads like Reddit has.

          • confusedwiseman@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            29 days ago

            It only works when it’s small because you’re usually reading all responses on a post anyway. It really didn’t matter what order I read all four responses.

            I would expect communities to grow over time if they can evolve in healthy ways. More diversity is usually good but then you’re digging for gold, the good comments, and the work digging was not only part of the fun but it made the find even better.

            I think the difference is those were all people talking for the audience. If you and I have a direct conversation and try to avoid our audience, we might realize what made those comment threads better. You watched a conversation between two people and not a performance to be observed.

            Then how do we keep these communities just the right size to make it work? To be fair, there are times I’m good with the easy dopamine hit and social media puts the pre-filtered pre voted treasure right there. No effort needed on my side.

            It’s like there’s glimpses of the old internet here and there.

            Yet the reader is already here.

            So, if I understood him correctly, you should upvote the parent comment.

  • Rimu@piefed.social
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    29 days ago

    Captchas are getting really tough. Took me 3 tries to get one right the other day.