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22 votes
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Europe’s controversial overhaul of online copyright receives final approval
48 votes -
radicle - peer-to-peer source code repositories using IPFS (alpha)
8 votes -
Intransigence: A social history of the internet
5 votes -
Microsoft says the FCC 'overstates' broadband availability in the US
16 votes -
Fifty years of the internet -- What we learned, and where will we go next?
4 votes -
A Russian 'troll slayer' went undercover at a troll factory and found that hundreds of Russians were working as paid trolls in rotating shifts
20 votes -
The internet is not your friend: MySpace and the loss of memories
6 votes -
Inside the 'shitposting' subculture the alleged Christchurch shooter belonged to
18 votes -
Reddit has become a battleground of alleged Chinese trolls
18 votes -
The lost worlds of telnet
17 votes -
Tim Berners-Lee: 'Stop web's downward plunge to dysfunctional future'
8 votes -
How the internet travels across oceans
8 votes -
Taxed, throttled or thrown in jail: Africa's new internet paradigm
7 votes -
An email marketing company left 809 million records exposed online
8 votes -
Why 'ji32k7au4a83' is a remarkably common password
57 votes -
I have forgotten how to read: For a long time Michael Harris convinced himself that a childhood spent immersed in old-fashioned books would insulate him from our new media climate. He was wrong.
19 votes -
Memes are our generation's protest art
13 votes -
What happened to broadband in Australia? NBN Co’s former CEO on how the Coalition broke the internet.
6 votes -
Altavista: The Rise & Fall of the Biggest Pre-Google Search Engine
12 votes -
Flickr will soon start deleting photos — and massive chunks of internet history
27 votes -
The internet was built on the free labor of open source developers. Is that sustainable?
14 votes -
Russia to disconnect from the internet as part of a planned cyberwar test
33 votes -
Online grocery shopping has been slow to catch on - We shop online for almost everything. Why not food?
11 votes -
The Google Chrome team is developing tools, heuristics and warnings to help protect against deceptive URLs
11 votes -
Is Huawei a friend or foe in the battle for 5G dominance?
4 votes -
The island nation of Tonga is facing a near-total internet blackout. The country’s only undersea cable was damaged during a storm.
12 votes -
“The Linux of social media” - How LiveJournal pioneered (then lost) blogging
8 votes -
These are all the federal HTTPS websites that’ll expire soon because of the US government shutdown
8 votes -
The internet, but not as we know it: Life online in China, Cuba, India and Russia
13 votes -
Who owns the internet? (What Big Tech’s monopoly powers mean for our culture.)
11 votes -
Why the UK's porn block is one of the worst ideas ever
30 votes -
Over a million IP addresses geolocate to a house in Pretoria, South Africa, causing people (and police) to show up regularly in search of criminals, stolen phones, and more
9 votes -
Life lessons from a lifestyle business - An interview with Matt Haughey, founder of MetaFilter
8 votes -
Forgive fast, block even faster and other rules for maintaining your sanity on the internet
6 votes -
How much of the internet is fake?
36 votes -
The internet of unprofitable things
17 votes -
.com crash of 2000
6 votes -
The EU Copyright Directive: What redditors in Europe need to know
11 votes -
Back from the edge: It’s easy to blame online rhetoric for violence. The reality is much harder
7 votes -
How to build a low-tech website
20 votes -
Two scenarios of Chinese hacking of Australian companies
China uses the cloud to step up spying on Australian business How China diverts, then spies on Australia's internet traffic
5 votes -
The community network manual: How to build the Internet yourself
13 votes -
The Web is still a DARPA weapon
12 votes -
A third of Wikipedia discussions are stuck in forever beefs
18 votes -
Advice for internet startup newbie
I might soon be part of an internet startup. We're talking with a relative about setting up a consultancy & business news service on a certain sector, and I've generated a part of the idea and...
I might soon be part of an internet startup. We're talking with a relative about setting up a consultancy & business news service on a certain sector, and I've generated a part of the idea and accepted to take on the technical/editorial side for a while (I've almost a year til when I start my master's, and will probably work up until when I start my thesis; so almost two years). If things work out, this might be a dream job (except academia) for me, and even very lucrative. But I'm fairly n00b in this space, both business and professional work, though I have the technical skills. Thus I'm seeking general advice on
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how to organise this thing: how to make sure we communicate well on dates and plans and how to make educated guesses when setting up an agenda
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how much will it cost: we'll start with making a database and running a sector-specific blog/news site as publicity (though I'll make sure the content is quite decent, not just a showpiece), but then later we'll introduce a tangential online service and a mobile app leveraging that crowd
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working with non-techies: I'll be the only techie in this startup and I need to help people with gathering, storing, organising and utilising historical data with certain variables, ensuring they keep an accurate record and can make quality queries easily; the 3 people apart from me will be non technical
I think quite a bit of you here have been involved in this sort of scenario, so maybe you could have some advice for me. I'd appreciate anything, examples of approaches, links to tools, what not, anything you think could be useful. Thanks a lot in advance!
13 votes -
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Curbing hate online: What companies should do now
8 votes -
In Iran, state sanctioned messaging apps are the new hallmark of internet nationalisation
4 votes -
China blocks website that revealed spyware and "re-education" camp monitoring
9 votes -
How do you view your participation on the Internet?
It’s no secret that the Internet has significantly changed even from just a decade ago. I’ve been thinking about online communities - particularly forums - and I’ve really begun to miss the sense...
It’s no secret that the Internet has significantly changed even from just a decade ago. I’ve been thinking about online communities - particularly forums - and I’ve really begun to miss the sense of discovery when finding a new one while browsing online. It was like lifting a rock and finding an entirely new collective of people writing to one another about anything (complete with graphic signatures). It was an internet subculture in progress. Something something Wild West.
Small forums like that did a number of things that I feel we haven’t been able to replicate. You got to know people over time. It wasn’t a feed you vaguely subscribed to, but a forum (in literal definition of the word) that you chose to participate in.
I often think about what probably defines a typical experience online for people these days and I feel that the smaller and more cozy feeling of actual community has been replaced by the digital equivalent of big box stores. Twitter, Youtube, Facebook, Twitch, Netflix. Big corporate places with portals and algorithms.
These aren’t necessarily bad things in and of themselves (aside from the chasing of a world in which nothing is left unplanned), but I’m trying to hone in on the idea that the sheer randomness of this medium has more or less vaporized. The concept that anything and everything you do on the Internet wasn’t aggressively being tracked and developed into digital profiles to be traded, used, shared, and sold by ad companies and an array of other organizations was a fart in the wind compared to what it’s like online today. Websites simply didn’t have 5 megabytes+ of Javascript whereas now you need a half a dozen browser extensions to make the internet a halfway decent thing to be on.
My hunch is that once upon a time, people (at least those that even had access to it) had a kind of amateur desire of wanting to create an account at a website (particularly a forum). Coming up on 2019, I think long and hard before creating another account anywhere. There even was an expectation to introduce yourself in some introduction subforum at many of these boards.
A theme that has become completely domineering is the inflated ego linked to tribalism. I see people being so serious about everything; there can be no reciprocal discussion about anything.
I think it’s probably trivial to dismiss this as nostalgia but I feel there are some real truths to this. The Internet is something you had the choice of actually logging off and disconnecting but today, everyone is constantly connected. We are in the age of distraction and preoccupation. Think about it: how many times have you picked up your (smart)phone purely out of reflex, not even to check something with purpose? You see it everywhere in public, certainly. The constant stream of brightly colored iconography, beeps, alerts, buzzing, push/notifications, and beyond are endless. Everything demands your attention, and it is never enough.
53 votes