The internet of the '90s had a certain charm - raw, unfiltered, and somehow more honest. Now? If we're being real, we're drowning in fabrication. Everyone's got a filter, an agenda, or a bot army behind them.
We might be witnessing peak internet in reverse. When authenticity dies and everything becomes performative, people naturally start looking for exits. They're hunting for spaces - whether it's decentralized platforms, private communities, or Web3 alternatives - where the signal-to-noise ratio isn't completely broken.
That's the real shift happening. It's not just nostalgia; it's people rejecting the fakeness and demanding different ways to connect.
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MetaverseMigrant
· 01-16 23:18
The momentum of the 90s is truly gone; now it's all fake prosperity fed by algorithms.
Web3 isn't necessarily any clearer either; it's just a different presentation of the same old story.
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MEVHunterLucky
· 01-16 21:29
Really, the internet is now a large performance stage, filled with bots running everywhere.
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WalletDivorcer
· 01-15 17:23
In the 90s, the internet and all that, thinking back now, it's a bit surreal... It's all fake, each one trying to pretend better than the next.
Web3 feels like just putting on a show, changing skins, right? The signal-to-noise ratio isn't much better, still pretty disappointing.
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BlindBoxVictim
· 01-14 23:11
The internet in the 90s was truly authentic, now it's all fake personas and bot spam... I believe in the Web3 savior theory.
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CommunityJanitor
· 01-14 23:05
The internet in the 90s was truly amazing. Now it's all about hypocrisy and algorithm feeding.
Can Web3 save the day? I'm a bit skeptical.
There's no going back, nostalgia can't fix the current mess.
Whether decentralized platforms are popular or not depends mainly on whether real people are there.
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PrivacyMaximalist
· 01-14 23:03
The real spirit of the internet in the 90s is truly gone now.
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zkProofInThePudding
· 01-14 22:41
The internet in the 90s was truly amazing, now it's all just fake packaging... Can Web3 save the world? I'm skeptical.
The internet of the '90s had a certain charm - raw, unfiltered, and somehow more honest. Now? If we're being real, we're drowning in fabrication. Everyone's got a filter, an agenda, or a bot army behind them.
We might be witnessing peak internet in reverse. When authenticity dies and everything becomes performative, people naturally start looking for exits. They're hunting for spaces - whether it's decentralized platforms, private communities, or Web3 alternatives - where the signal-to-noise ratio isn't completely broken.
That's the real shift happening. It's not just nostalgia; it's people rejecting the fakeness and demanding different ways to connect.