Although I progressed from my childhood into my teens in the 90s, l don’t retain much memory of the internet back then as l had no exposure to it.

  • Treczoks@lemmy.world
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    15 hours ago

    Y2K was not the problem. Eternal September is. Before that, the Internet was a better place. Much better.

    • T156@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      I feel like this comment could at least benefit from a rough explanation of what Eternal September was. Someone unfamiliar with Y2K isn’t likely to be familiar with the term.

      Back in the day, it used to be that every September, there would be an influx of new users on the internet, BBS, what have you, every September, because of the school/uni holidays. Because they were unfamiliar with internet etiquette, they’d be confused by the existing terminology, or be a little annoying to the existing users, by not being familiar with the culture there.

      Eternal September was a point where every day on the internet was September. There would always be people new to the internet on it, enough for there to be a major impact.

    • dzsimbo@sopuli.xyz
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      12 hours ago

      I don’t feel like it’s new users not knowing etiquette that’s the problem. I think it’s corporate greed and enshittification.

      The internet has been dumbed down to a handful of high-traffic sites, and those are trying to make a buck of us. You ran a server/website for your own benefit, not to make a dollar. It’s corpo greed, I tell ya…