- Joined
- Apr 12, 2021
One of the things I miss the most about the halcyon years of the internet is the culture of near-complete anonymity. In obscure forums (and not-so-obscure social media sites), I spent my nights talking to a variety of online friends who, to this day, I still have no idea what their names might've been or what they looked like, despite having such fond memories of them. Conversely, no one knew these things about me. Your identity wasn't asked for or expected of you, all that mattered was that you contributed something to the conversation.
Flash forward to now-- just from first-hand experience, I've seen Facebook require government ID to access your account. Instagram asks it's users to self-report race in surveys. The age of anonymity has ended not with a bang or even a whisper, but with a new audience of users who capitalize on identifying factors and protest when these factors are not required by the websites they use. I agree that the powers that be running these websites are corrupt, but they're also unfortunately just giving this new wave of internet users what they ask for.
I remember from the late '00s to early '10s, when I first dove into forum culture, it was a genuinely exciting experience, and I think the anonymity was really what made it. It made me happy to finish my daily obligations, boot up the computer, and see what my friends from all around the world were up to, even if all I recognized them by was a username and an icon of whichever online craze was the flavor of the day.
KF aside, I don't believe this culture exists anymore, and logging into modern social media is a chore.
Flash forward to now-- just from first-hand experience, I've seen Facebook require government ID to access your account. Instagram asks it's users to self-report race in surveys. The age of anonymity has ended not with a bang or even a whisper, but with a new audience of users who capitalize on identifying factors and protest when these factors are not required by the websites they use. I agree that the powers that be running these websites are corrupt, but they're also unfortunately just giving this new wave of internet users what they ask for.
I remember from the late '00s to early '10s, when I first dove into forum culture, it was a genuinely exciting experience, and I think the anonymity was really what made it. It made me happy to finish my daily obligations, boot up the computer, and see what my friends from all around the world were up to, even if all I recognized them by was a username and an icon of whichever online craze was the flavor of the day.
KF aside, I don't believe this culture exists anymore, and logging into modern social media is a chore.