this post was submitted on 17 Jun 2023
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I miss the old forums and discussion boards that we had pre "web 2.0". I read a YA book series as a teenager that had a forum, and met one of the best friends of my life on it. I know people still do such things, but I've never really had a close knit community like we had back then, not since the likes of Reddit and other social media giants have dominated the way we all use the internet. I'd be very happy to go back to the internet of the early aughts and just stay there.
Niche web forums still exist around a discrete interest group, they have lost a lot of traffic to enshittified giants but I think the people who post their lazy questions on facebook groups are better off there anyway. Repeat questions was an issue on web forums and still is, but I think having an additional torrent of ask-before-search users would make forums untenable now.
The internet was amazing when only technically-capable people were on it. Or in other words, everything gets ruined by being too popular.
Is this an instance of what they call "the tragedy of the commons"?
I hope that ChatGPT will eventually solve this problem.
It was before my time, but from what Iβve heard I would have to agree. Some smaller subreddits and discord servers can emulate some elements of those communities, but itβs just not the same. Especially discord, it loves shoving nitro in your face, and finding old discussions is impossible unless messages happened to be pinned at the time.