Molly White's Citation Needed - We can have a different web
Episode Date: May 1, 2024Many yearn for the "good old days" of the web. We could have those good old days back — or something even better — and if anything, it would be easier now than it ever was. Originally published on... May 1, 2024.
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I'm Molly White, and you're listening to the audio feed for the Citation Needed Newsletter.
You can see the text version of the newsletter online at citationneeded.news.
We can have a different web.
This article was originally published on May 1, 2024.
As a lifelong lover of the web, it's hard not to feel a little hopeless right now.
Search engines, the window into the web for many people, top their results with pages containing thousands of
words of auto-generated nothingness, perfectly optimized for search engine prominence, and to
pull in money via ads and affiliate links, while simultaneously devoid of any useful information.
Social networks have become the web for many people who rarely venture outside of their tall
and increasingly reinforced walls. As Tom Eastman once put it, the web has rotted into five giant
websites, each filled with screenshots of the other four. Within those enclosures, the character
limits, neutered subset of web functionality, and constant push to satisfy the enigmatic desires of an
algorithm tuned to keeping eyeballs on the platform, encourage sameness, vapid engagement farming,
and rage bait while stifling creativity. Newspapers, whose evolution towards online models once stoked
optimism for more accessible and dynamic journalism that could lead to a more informed and
democratically engaged citizenry have become luxury goods, as aggressive paywalls and expensive
subscription models are increasingly deployed by the hedge funds and other profit-hungry entities
that control these papers. Some use the excuse that they're trying to protect their journalism
from the unsanctioned scraping by companies training ever-hungrier artificial
intelligence models. Yet those same media outlets hasten their own demise with wave after wave of layoffs,
or by chasing hairbrain schemes like churning out tedious clickbait or their own AI-generated soup,
even as their executives continue to cash huge checks. Many websites now require one to steal themselves
for battle against the advertisements and trackers and GDPR cookie consent pop-ups and AI-powered chatbot
windows that interrupt you to offer to helpfully bungle whatever you ask of them.
Ad block is no longer optional, and even with it, trackers and advertisements slither through the cracks.
Browsing the web brings with it the ever-present feeling that you're being watched.
Your activities and preferences and habits all being logged and funneled into a
giant vat of horrifying data soup, all just to help more companies serve you more of these
intrusive ads that you must endlessly swat away as you try to find whatever it was
you were looking for.
It is tempting, amid all of this decay, to yearn for the good old days.
The emergence of online chat and instant messaging, where you use some acronym name chat
like ICQ or IRC or AOL Messenger to talk to friends you knew in real life or anonymous
strangers all over the globe. Those Phpbb forums and message boards on sites like game
FAQs, or for some, the BBSs and Usenet news groups that predated them. The Flash games and the
whimsical GeoCities sites full of dancing hamsters and the MySpace pages full of garish,
hand-coded styles, and glitter gifts and auto-playing MIDI tracks. Those incredibly specific websites
created by one guy with an encyclopedic knowledge of something really niche,
or the labors of love that were fan sites dedicated to The X-Files or the Backstreet Boys.
Some of this is nostalgia for our younger years, I think.
According to my very scientific Twitter and Mastodon polls,
around 60% and 42% respectively if people happen to be under 20 years old
during the period they identified as the good old days.
It may be that we are, at least in part, yearning for the days when logging on to the internet
was less likely to mean going to work or paying a bill, and more likely to mean playing
Roonscape, or hoping that the green circle on AIM would light up next to the name of our crush
after school.
But some of this is certainly based in the feeling that the web was just better back then.
Fewer trolls and a lot fewer bots.
Google search results that actually returned what you were looking for,
not just the sites that paid the most.
Cobbled together blogs and live journal pages
written by people who felt authentic,
who maybe wanted to attract more visitors
to tick up their page view counters
or add entries to their guest book pages,
but who weren't trying to cultivate a persona as an influencer or a thought leader,
build a brand, or monetize their audience.
more of a neighborhood feeling, where everyone was a possible friend and less fear that people
might interpret your social media post as uncharitably as possible.
The worry that the girl you were talking to might be a man pretending to be a girl, but probably
not the fear that she's a crypto-romance scammer, or part of a state-sponsored disinformation network.
Fewer and less intrusive ads, less engagement farming, less surveillance.
fewer paywalls, more information wants to be free.
The thing is, none of this is gone.
Nothing about the web has changed that prevents us from going back.
If anything, it's become a lot easier.
We can return.
Better yet, we can restore the things we loved about the old web
while incorporating the wonderful things that have emerged since
and developing even better things as we go forward.
When I envision the web, I picture an infinite expanse of empty space that stretches as far as the eye can see.
It's full of fertile soil, but no seeds have taken root, that is, except for about an acre of it.
Years ago, in the web's early days, people entered this infinite expanse and began to cultivate it.
First, it was the scientists at CERN, who poked a hole through into this uncultivated world and began to experiment,
within that acre. Eventually, they widened the entry point to enable others, mostly from
universities, to join. Everyone set up their own tiny plot within this acre, sewing seeds that
they personally loved. With time, the entrance widened even further, and geeks outside of universities
found their way in. Then, home computing really began to take off, and the number of visitors
expanded far beyond just the geeky hobbyists.
Some people continued to cultivate their own little patches in the acre,
but others opened community gardens, forum sites, and shared blogs,
and chat rooms, and web hosting services where people could develop their own projects.
People brought in little gnome sculptures and garish lawn flamingos.
Some people erected fencing to control who wandered in,
or even who could see in, to their plots.
But people had also begun to build pathways in the spaces among the patches, web rings and hand-curiated blog roles, vigorous hyperlinking, and early versions of search engines.
There were weeds, too. Invasive plants that threatened to crowd out what some people had lovingly built.
Trolls that poisoned the forums and chat rooms, or the threat of viruses that made people more cautious.
And some from the outside world began to worry.
What do you mean there are no police there?
And you're letting kids in?
Hey, those are my seeds you're using,
and now you're just giving them away for free to other people.
But eventually, businesses set up shop,
selling everything from seeds to tractors,
to garden gnomes, to landscaping services,
to all the things that people were used to using
back outside of this digital expanse.
And at first, they fit in among the hobbyist plots and community gardens.
But with time,
businesses learned there were other ways to extract money from the community that had grown within this acre in the digital world.
They set up tolls on the pathways.
They planted invasive species that encroached on what other people had built, shading them out.
Or they spread pesticides that poisoned what others had cultivated.
Some acquired plot after plot after plot, building their own empires through which others needed to pass to get where they were trying to go.
Many businesses initially invited people in with open arms, promising that if they moved within their boundaries, the business would take care of all the hard stuff, the digging, the weeding, the sewing, and let you just do the parts you wanted to do.
After time, many people opted to do so, drawn in by these easy and free services that let them spend more time admiring the flowers or visiting neighbors and less time doing the dirty work.
But then the walls went up.
Towering over the rest of the acre, massive walls shaded out much of what was happening outside of these businesses' enclosures.
People couldn't see over to know what was happening beyond.
So was it even worth the effort to make a visit?
After all, there's so much to see inside.
These businesses set up right at the gate, too, so some new entrance thought the space within the walls was all there was.
They never saw the infinite expanse beyond, nor the creativity that was still floating.
flourishing out there. Some pathways remained, mostly linking together these giant fortresses,
but with time even those were made harder to pass. Rules were imposed to limit what plants you could
grow and how you could grow them, and who might ever be able to see them. Some maintained plots
within multiple of these businesses' walled areas, but found themselves having to devote more and more
of their time to maintaining all of their disparate gardens, or let some of them.
them lie fallow. The businesses developed systems to quickly usher people along from undesirable
tenants, drawing their attention to the carefully manicured plots where nary a blade of grass was out
of place. And they started checking IDs at the door, making sure you were known both to the
business owners and the policemen who would set up watchtowers and CCTV networks. Increasingly,
drones passed overhead, operated by businesses who peered in to see what kind of
of plants you were growing and what kind of decorations you were putting up, in hopes of selling you
something similar later on. If the tenant decided they were sick of their spot within a walled
garden, well, they could leave, but it meant they abandoned what they had built, and the path for friends
or admirers of their work to come visit them became a lot more arduous to traverse.
This is the world of today's web. Most of us spend our days within the confines of a handful of
platforms, wandering around to admire what people have done with the seeds they are allowed,
in the space they are allotted, with platform owners directing us to the gardens they think we might
like, or more often the ones they think will keep us within their walls for longer.
Occasionally, we venture outside to another plot, but sometimes we're given dire warnings
before we go. After all, there could be weeds out there. And those who cultivate those
plots outside of these walls face pressures to conform to the whims of the businesses in hopes that
the pathways remain open. Otherwise, they might toil away in silence, rarely seeing visitors like they
one day used to. It feels grim, and especially so for those of us who remember the days before
the walls. We miss the messy but innovative landscaping, the use of space beyond the tiny squares
our landlords provide us, the mostly polite strangers who wandered through and remarked on our work
or shared their knowledge with us. But we often forget, that world is still out there. The walled
enclosures that crowded out much of that acre of developed land still reside within an infinite
expanse of possibility. There are no limits to the web. If it has borders, they are ever expanding.
We may feel as though we are trapped in a tiny, crowded, noisy space,
but it's only because we don't see over the walls.
If we wanted, each of us could escape those walls
and set up our own spaces within the limitless, fertile soil beyond.
Some of us might opt to leave those walls permanently,
while others might choose to split our time
between our beautiful, messy, free world outside,
to maintain smaller, meticulously groomed simulacrums,
within the enclosures that hint, without angering our landlords at the creations beyond.
We can periodically smuggle seeds and plant cuttings beyond the walls, ensuring that if the
proprietors decide to evict us, our gardens will live on.
We can develop protocols, more resilient versions of those early footpaths, that inherently
resist the toll booths and border crossing gates established by the businesses with the walls.
We can even develop our own community gardens with spaces for tenants that have their own models of governance far beyond the single benevolent platform dictatorship model that inevitably grows less benevolent as money changes hands.
While some of the early gardens that we reminisce about didn't survive the shade of the large platforms or the dwindling flow of visitors that were rerouted within those walls, new gardens can be cultivated to their specificity.
People can experiment with combining the things they loved about the old gardens, with the tools and the models of the ones that have grown since then, or return to the spirit of experimentation and try new things altogether.
They can draw on the population explosion within the digital expanse to bring in new people with new ideas and new energy, to revitalize what once was and make it better than before.
Though we now face a new challenge, as the dominance of the massive walled gardens has become overwhelming,
we have tools in our arsenal, the memories of what once was, and the creativity of far more people than ever before,
who entered the digital expanse but have grown disillusioned with the business moguls controlling life within the walls.
And if anything, it's easier now to do all of this than it ever was.
In the early days, people had to fight to enter the expanse at all, and those who did were starting
with little. Now the expanse feels ubiquitous in some countries, and is becoming ever more
accessible in others. Sophisticated tools and techniques are available even to novices,
where once the walled gardens were the only viable option for novice gardeners or those
without many resources, that is no longer so much the case, and the skills and resources
required to establish one's own sovereign plot become more accessible by the day.
We can have a different web if we want it.
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