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34 votes
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A new internet standard called L4S could significantly lower the amount of time we spend waiting for things to load
37 votes -
History of country code top-level domains, with a map of the most popular ones in use | Map Men
14 votes -
The internet is worse than ever – now what?
28 votes -
The history of emoticons
3 votes -
Inside an OnlyFans empire: Sex, influence and the new American Dream
32 votes -
US cable lobby and Ted Cruz are disappointed as Federal Communications Commission bans digital discrimination
43 votes -
The people who ruined the internet
73 votes -
Net neutrality in the US is about more than just blocking and throttling, don't be fooled by attempts to limit the discussion to these concepts
27 votes -
Google decides to pull up the ladder on the open internet, pushes for unconstitutional regulatory proposals
66 votes -
Trial testimony - Google considered and rejected creating a form of search that doesn't track users history from website to website
14 votes -
Internet Artifacts
61 votes -
The poster’s guide to the internet of the future
22 votes -
The unreasonable effectiveness of plain text
21 votes -
An audacious plan to halt the Internet's enshittification - Cory Doctorow
53 votes -
New Zealand Matrix fan film becomes oldest active torrent in the world
47 votes -
The Brazillian who nutted in his Dreamcast: Leonam's journey
7 votes -
Gen Z falls for online scams more than their boomer grandparents do
73 votes -
US Federal Communications Commission details plan to restore the net neutrality rules repealed by Ajit Pai: banning fast lanes and ISP restrictions on legal content
50 votes -
The movement for affordable, community-led broadband: Grassroots organizations like NYC Mesh want to close the digital divide, one rooftop at a time
20 votes -
Why scalpers can get Olivia Rodrigo tickets and you can't
12 votes -
Unlimited Kagi searches for $10 per month
96 votes -
Timeline of the history of the web
4 votes -
And then Elon Musk said there’ll be no more war – not via his satellite. Aren’t we lucky to have the world in his hands?
69 votes -
How Barstool built an empire by swiping sports highlights and music clips online
14 votes -
How telling people to die became normal - merciless trolling is a fact of online life that may never go away
37 votes -
Blockchains are entering their “broadband era”
7 votes -
Make the Wayback Machine the real internet
46 votes -
The Electronic Frontier Foundation, kiwifarms, death, harassment: a critique
58 votes -
Senator admits "Kids Online Safety Act" will target trans content online
28 votes -
France’s browser-based website blocking proposal will set a disastrous precedent for the open internet
49 votes -
Bringing back the minimal web
112 votes -
Web scraping for me, but not for thee
19 votes -
The world’s last internet cafes
23 votes -
The creators of TikTok caused my website to shut down
12 votes -
What "lost" web page would you like to find again?
What was your favorite web page back in the day that you would visit religiously and tell all your friends about but have since lost? Did it shutter permanently or did you lose the bookmark when...
What was your favorite web page back in the day that you would visit religiously and tell all your friends about but have since lost? Did it shutter permanently or did you lose the bookmark when switching computers never to find it again?
Back in the days of printed web page yellow pages and search engines you had to submit your page to be reviewed before it was listed, I had found a page about movie easter eggs, errors and insider information. It had factoids about nearly 1000 movies ranging from obscure facts, mistakes in editing, anachronisms, funny on-set stories and the like.
It was fun to read that this character was named after the art directors niece, the stunt car is visible losing 8 hubcaps in the main chase, etc. It was amazing to read how different movies would interact (IIRC, Kim Bassinger's gasp/jump reaction to opening the door in "Batman" was real due to them having a xenomoprh from Aliens there instead of Jack Nicholson since they were filming at the same time). It was also cool to read that certain characters made cameos in other movies (most people caught that Randolph and Mortimer Duke from "Trading Places" were in "Coming to America" but there are so many other not as obvious blink-and-you'll-miss-it cameos). I never would have noticed the car visible in the background of Johnny Cage vs Scorpion in the orchard fight in "Mortal Kombat" without this page--and now I can never unsee it when I watch it.
I don't know if I lost the bookmark or if the page shut down so I deleted it but any search I've undertaken for this page in the last few decades only seems to return listicles like "21 obvious anachronisms in modern movies!" but not my all comprehensive target.
Honorable mention to Damn Interesting (although I did find that one again after a few years). Although it's underwent some turbulance and changes since I first disovered it, I would often reread the articles and gleefully looked forward to each new article when I was younger. With article names like Lake Peigneur: The Swirling Vortex of Doom it was hard not to be intrigued.
79 votes -
'Arc' browser is now available to download without a waitlist (for macOS)
38 votes -
The King of Jordan approved a cybercrime bill that will crack down on online speech deemed harmful to national unity
18 votes -
AI is ruining the Internet
88 votes -
$5 billion Google lawsuit over ‘Incognito mode’ tracking moves a step closer to trial
58 votes -
How often do you go through your bookmarks/favorites?
I recently switch browsers from Safari to Orion after many, many years. I imported all of my bookmarks and then realized that I couldn't remember the last time I went through them to see what was...
I recently switch browsers from Safari to Orion after many, many years. I imported all of my bookmarks and then realized that I couldn't remember the last time I went through them to see what was still useful (or even around).
I also realized that I don't save a ton of bookmarks anymore as I keep all of my browsing history available and search through that.
How often do you all go through your bookmarks/favorites?
34 votes -
Douglas Adams - Hyperland | A fantastical guided look at the future of the internet as imagined by Douglas Adams in the 1990s
24 votes -
FedFingerprinting: A federated learning approach to website fingerprinting attacks in Tor networks
6 votes -
What would the internet of people look like now?
39 votes -
How to search for a better deal on broadband
6 votes -
'Straight out of the authoritarian playbook': US watchdog sued by Musk's X hits back
33 votes -
Tor’s shadowy reputation will only end if we all use it
30 votes -
The Gemini protocol
20 votes -
Not all porn is created equal - is there such a thing as a healthy pornography?
83 votes -
Lights could be the future of the internet and data transmission
9 votes