It’s the end of the internet as we know it—and I feel fine

The internet feels like it’s falling apart. 

Not literally. Structurally, it’s sound. There are plenty of fiber optic cables lining ocean floors, cell towers looming above cityscapes, and server-filled data centers. But the very foundations of the utilitarian web—the platforms that undergird our everyday experiences online—feel shaky, pulsing with the first foreshocks of a collapse.

To start, nothing seems to work anymore. Google’s search engine once provided directory-level assistance to the denizens of the internet. Now it’s chock full of ads, sidebars, SEO-optimized clickbait, and artificial intelligence-powered guesstimations of possible answers to peoples’ questions. Earlier this year, a group of German researchers found that Google ranked product reviews pages high when they had low-quality text, tons of affiliate links to ecommerce sites, and were riddled with SEO tricks that don’t exactly coincide with quality. In other words, Google was letting their platform get co-opted by the lowest of the low.

On Amazon, the digital shelves are littered with sponsored products and cheap replicas of popular items. On either Amazon or Google, you’ll often need to scroll for a bit to get anything remotely helpful or relevant when you search. Government antitrust complaints against both companies have essentially called them toll booths for advertisers, who need to pay-to-play to get noticed, which has degraded those services in the process. When big tech giants make their relied-on services worse, that’s bad for consumers—even if they don’t have to pay more.

On social media, the situation is even more dire. Facebook is functionally good for fighting with high school friends about politics, getting birthday reminders, and learning who is married or pregnant. There’s almost no news on the platform anymore, and my feed is full of meme pages that I would never follow, repurposed TikToks posted as Reels, and—you guessed it—low-quality ads. X is a right-wing cesspool full of Elon Musk sycophants, tech bro hustle posters, and—good lord—the worst ads you’ve ever seen outside of Truth Social. TikTok, one of the only interesting, serendipitous, and (usually) joyful places on the internet is in danger of being banned from the United States in the next month unless the conservative Supreme Court or President-elect Donald Trump himself intervene to save it.

And the rise of generative AI has meant that every one of these platforms is now infused with what’s most commonly called slop, insultingly bad fake images often designed to trick or enrage people. You can find Facebook Groups fawning over beautiful landscapes without realizing they’re melting away if you look closely enough, and that the gorgeous Instagram model in the photo has far too many fingers.

The internet, of course, is controlled by the largest, richest, most powerful companies in the world. It’s not a dead internet, as some have posited, because we primarily consume artificial content; rather, it’s living and neglected, merely damned by corporate greed, indolence, and indifference. Silicon Valley’s giants no longer compete and no longer innovate; instead they cut costs, boost profit margins, and block out competitors in order to maintain consumer habit and market dominance. Online platforms give us convenience, but no novelty, and they have vanishing utility in increasingly our digital lives. 

In 2025, perhaps the whole thing will explode. But hopefully, people will begin to rethink their reliance on digital platforms that treat them with utter contempt, like they’re consumers, like they’re “users.” If it’s the end of the internet as we know it, then I feel fine.

https://www.fastcompany.com/91246383/its-the-end-of-the-internet-as-we-know-it-and-i-feel-fine?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

созданный 7mo | 17 дек. 2024 г., 11:40:03


Войдите, чтобы добавить комментарий

Другие сообщения в этой группе

I’m a two-time tech founder. But restaurants are where I learned to lead

Sudden equipment failures. Supply chain surprises. Retaining staff as the goalposts move in real time. These aren’t challenges I’ve faced as a tech founder—but I have faced them running restaurant

19 июл. 2025 г., 13:10:05 | Fast company - tech
Forget chatbots. Physical and embodied AI are now coming for your job

Amazon recently announced that it had deployed its one-millionth robot across its work

19 июл. 2025 г., 10:50:03 | Fast company - tech
Staying hands on made scaling to $1B+ fun for Cloudflare’s founder

On this week’s Most Innovative Companies podcast, Cloudflare COO Michelle Zatlyn talks with Fast Company staff writer David Salazar about hitting $1B in revenue and going global, as well as

19 июл. 2025 г., 08:30:05 | Fast company - tech
‘Who did this guy become?’ This creator quit his job and lost his TikTok audience

If you’ve built an audience around documenting your 9-to-5 online, what happens after you hand in your notice?

That’s the conundrum facing Connor Hubbard, aka “hubs.life,” a creator who

18 июл. 2025 г., 20:50:06 | Fast company - tech
OpenAI advisory board says it should remain a nonprofit

OpenAI should continue to be 

18 июл. 2025 г., 18:40:03 | Fast company - tech
Meta-owned WhatsApp could be banned in Russia. Here’s why

WhatsApp should prepare to leave the Russian market, a lawmaker who regulates the IT sector

18 июл. 2025 г., 16:20:03 | Fast company - tech
The simple pleasures of computing in 1995

This is an edition of Plugged In, a weekly newsletter by Fast Company global technology editor Harry McCracken. You can sign up to receive it each Friday and read all issues

18 июл. 2025 г., 13:50:08 | Fast company - tech