• brucethemoose@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    4
    arrow-down
    2
    ·
    edit-2
    2 days ago

    This is verging onto old internet nostalgia, and while I agree with the sentiment and love the old internet… it was a trash fire.

    And not safe.

    Someone vividly this out to me recently, and then I looked though archives of old threads. I was a moron on the internet in the 2000s, more than I realized.

    I guess what I’m saying is: yeah, the Big Tech grip seems bad. It is bad. But today’s kids will probably deal with it better than we expect, and whatever kids get into 20 years from now will be unspeakable, I’m sure.

    I’m honestly more worried about boomers, who don’t seem to be adapting to this stuff unless they were already IT folks.

    • Lfrith@lemmy.ca
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      edit-2
      2 days ago

      One of the reasons stated for disliking AI has been data harvesting and privacy infringement.

      Which lot of people are not realizing they are providing on their own and doing a bulk of the invasive AI’s job for them from the get go.

      I guess look at how you use lemmy. Would you feel comfortable if your username was your name and profile pic your face? Did past you do that on your interactions with the web so people can type in your name and find archives of your contributions as opposed to it being dumb things from a random username? Not that there weren’t people who did, but the sentiment of be careful what you share and a more cautious view did appear to be more common compared to now.

      So its not so much social media is bad, but the way people choose to use it now days that people don’t look deeper into. Kind of like how some people will upload videos of crimes they are doing on social media because of how comfortable they’ve gotten to treating it like a personal diary.

      When I bring up the old internet it’s about general approach of what information is provided and given freely by the user as opposed to technical assessment of how secure the old internet was.