• @orcrist@lemm.ee
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    01 year ago

    I’m 100% feeling YouTube’s throttling. It has already led me to watch fewer videos.

  • @abraxas@sh.itjust.works
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    01 year ago

    What I don’t get is how most places, people get mad at us for not being able to read an article due to the paywall. I mean, I’m not going to subscribe to 50 shitty news sites just so I can read someone’s damn random shit.

  • @ClamDrinker@lemmy.world
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    01 year ago

    Lets be real - This isn’t going to change on it’s own. The only way for it to change is if everyone collectively took a stand against it. Which simply just won’t happen. The most reasonable thing to do is to focus your energy on collectives that actively reject such practices. Oh hey, you’re already in one: Lemmy, good job. As long as we work together to create a small corner of the internet that remains true to what the internet should be, we can grow it and create a better internet in the long term.

  • Cowbee [he/they]
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    01 year ago

    Capitalism does this to itself due to the profit motive. Where once is innovation and brand new disruption becomes petty iteration as this new frontier slowly but surely becomes a well-oiled profit machine. The upside is that FOSS makes replacing this profit-generating soul-sucking bloatware with better alternatives very easy.

    Replacing the existing infrastructure of Capitalism by building up parallel structures is a valid means of weakening Capital itself.

  • BolexForSoup
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    01 year ago

    Every time I feel this way, I take one more step to getting rid of one of the offending parties.

    I’m like 50% off gmail (proton mail rules), 100% off gdrive/google maps, all in on libre office, proton VPN, little snitch, and about to boot linux onto one of my old MBPro‘s so I can start transitioning over to using Linux as a daily driver. I’m new to it but I’m decently tech savvy so I think I can find a distro that is a decent balance of privacy, control, but still user-friendly.

    The list goes on, and a lot needs to be done, but my experience at my computer and online in general has been slowly improving over the last year or two since I’ve gotten more aggressive about it. Also leaving Reddit helped lol

    • pragmakist
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      01 year ago

      Yeah.

      And we can still block entire sites on the web.

      The sites the friends with adblockers promote.
      The friends who don’t notice what they promote.
      What unholy bastards the people who own the sites they promote are.

  • @JimmyBigSausage@lemm.ee
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    01 year ago

    Ha! Recently went to breakfast with a couple of new neighbors (partners).

    They were asking me what apps I enjoyed and I told them that I WAS enjoying Apollo. Told them I left Reddit. They sort looked at me. They later said they both worked at home. Their job was creating ad space for the web. One of them gave me the enshitification face. Sigh.

    • @Tak@lemmy.ml
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      01 year ago

      They would have regretted asking me this. They’d be opening an F-droid can of worms they couldn’t stop and my autistic ass wouldn’t be able to gauge if it made them uncomfortable.

    • ares35
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      01 year ago

      my own site for my very small business gets about 10 legit visitors a week, none of which have ever connected via a known vpn address (dating back some 15 years). another 100 page views a week on average from legit bots (msn, google, etc).

      the rest (and well over 95% of overall traffic) is bots, scrapers, and hackers, many of which use addresses linked to vpn services and pound the sites on the server looking for exploitable scripts (wordpress related, usually; which we’ve never run here), login and contact forms. if i could simply ‘flip a switch’ and redirect all vpn traffic to a separate landing page, i would seriously consider doing so. it wouldn’t affect site availability to our legit users and our target audience. but for now, mod_security is doing a stellar job and is the mvp.

      • the post of tom joad
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        01 year ago

        Uh oh, look around old-timer! If they made Back to the Future today, Marty would be going back to 1994.

        gently turns to dust beside you

        • @rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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          01 year ago

          In 2009 there was such a provider (talking about Moscow region in Russia) as Skylink, which gave good connectivity in rural areas and Skype traffic was unlimited (I’m not making it up). It was good enough for Skype voice calls.

  • wurzelwerk
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    1 year ago

    Thing is, most people don’t want to pay for services that to them seemed to be free since forever. And this creates collective social pressure to follow suit. Nothing a big company offers is ever free. You’re just paying in alternate currency.

    • @Powerpoint@lemmy.ca
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      01 year ago

      It’s gross though. Say you started to pay, they would still force ads into their product because they’re greedy and demanding more money. We’re seeing this with streaming sites now.

      • wurzelwerk
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        01 year ago

        The funny thing is with youtube, for example, I am a premium user. I deactivated all tracking of my habits on there. Now I am greeted, as a homepage, with nothing else than a call to action to reactivate said tracking. As a paying customer I see less (as in none at all) content on the homepage than an anonymous user would. I am subbed to 170+ channels. Yet they tell me they cannot come up with suggestions unless they can track my every step on their platform. sus. And when saying funny I mean extremely aggravating.

  • @Sarcasmo220@lemmy.ml
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    01 year ago

    The browser in my computer at work doesn’t have an ad blocker. I haven’t installed one because I most of the time I’m using it to access our intranet. But when I do happen to use the internet, damn are there so many ads! They literally block the content I’m trying to read, and come back even when I try to close it.

    All that to say, due to enshittification I will forever keep my ad blocker on my personal computer.

    • @Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      01 year ago

      Can’t imagine what the web is like outside of ublock origin…
      The few websites I see on pcs by clients are essentially state backed so they don’t have ads as well.

      Scary world I am not eager to experience.

    • Liam Mayfair
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      01 year ago

      It’s almost as though the overbearing Yahoo/Ask! toolbars that used to plague everyone’s Internet Explorer back in the day have mutated and infected the internet at large. Now most websites feel like one useless, giant malware-riddled toolbar.

    • caseyweederman
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      01 year ago

      I’m baffled when companies that self-host DNS don’t have DNS-level adblocking.

      • @_dev_null@lemmy.zxcvn.xyz
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        01 year ago

        It’s because there’s websites out there that will entirely break, and for really dumb fucking reasons. I’ve seen some sites not even load due to google tag manager being blocked. Most of the time it’s a signal to me that I don’t want to have anything to do with that domain.

        However, if this was at work, that would be a call to IT. Multiply that by potentially hundreds of calls on the regular, and that could get really expensive.

        The better solution here I think, is to default the browser install with uBlock Origin already there. Then allow the user the power to toggle the addon to their own liking. Then last, train your employees to know what the addon is, and how to use it.

        Then it’s the best of both worlds: websites aren’t necessarily breaking for all users, ads are absent as a default state, and users are empowered to control their own experience. (And yes there’s still going to be Jims and Karens calling for support, but they’re going to regardless, those types will always find a reason.)

  • @LadyAutumn@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 year ago

    Web 2.0 desperately clinging to life. FOSS self hosted web is the future. Internet speeds are fast enough on home networks that self hosting is perfectly viable for essentially everything, and for the few things that can’t be self hosted by just anyone, FOSS alternatives and work arounds to existing paid services exist.

    Internet is becoming harder to monopolize, and increasing amounts of power and control are being handed back to the working class online. FOSS has become a movement that has grown exponentially over the last few years.

    Their next recourse will be attempting to make jail time a thing for piracy. Both for hosting it and downloading it.

    • @wewbull@iusearchlinux.fyi
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      01 year ago

      There’s certainly a bubble bursting. You only have to look at all the layoffs.fyi since COVID. I’m just hoping it’s happening in a slow enough way that it’s not going to take more legitimate companies with it.

      AI is the next bubble. It will hit a brick wall either legally or just on functionality (maybe both). I can see uses for targeted models, bespoke to a use case, but training those is too expensive right now. General models are just toys IMHO. Unfortunately it’s going to get a few years for everyone to realise.

      • @SuperSpruce@lemmy.zip
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        01 year ago

        The brick wall on AI is not functionality. It’s cost of running the neural networks. It’s simply not financially realistic to integrate ChatGPT into everything.

      • @GluWu@lemm.ee
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        01 year ago

        You are going to train the AI that replaces you. They aren’t going to tell you that though. I’m starting comprehensive plans so that any future work I do can’t be fed into AI. Making hardware that just dumps random input when I’m not using it. Isolating and containing any human input that does happen. Distributing my work across as many devices as possible to only give each it’s single app use worth of data.

    • @nossaquesapao@lemmy.eco.br
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      01 year ago

      It’s not so simple. I’ve been trying to go the foss self-hosted way, as well as help p2p projects, and I got stuck because I’m behind a cgnat, unable to forward ports, and my shitty isp has no ipv6. I can’t afford vpns at the moment, so I got stuck. Besides, all that needed a lot of tech skills most people won’t have. This is a serious barrier of entry for a lot of people.

    • @Wanderer@lemm.ee
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      01 year ago

      Some one will say something offensive or a slight threat and the government will charge you for a crime like you did it.

      They want the Internet to be HR speak only.

  • @lemmesay@discuss.tchncs.de
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    01 year ago

    I’ve come to the same terms.
    other day I decided to open reddit.com and noticed that almost every other (re)post was from a bot. even the top comments were from bots.
    since then I’ve added reddit to my growing blocklist.

    I now spend more time on feeder, an RSS reader app.

    • the post of tom joad
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      01 year ago

      I haven’t been to reddit much since the api fiasco. If it’s not too much trouble can you point me to some obvious bots so i can get a feel for what that looks like?

      • @lemmesay@discuss.tchncs.de
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        01 year ago

        here’s one i got on r/all:

        screenshot of r/all. post titled "Christian on a plane" a search for exact title returns reposts going back to 2 years

        I didn’t scroll further or opened comment section because I didn’t want to overwhelm my brain with ragebait.

        • Looks like straight up rage bait. I mean reddit was heading down that path for at least the last 5 years but that is progressively worse than last July