Monday, May 26, 2014 08:30 PM CEST
The Internet as we know it is dying
How Facebook and Google are killing the classic Internet and
reinventing it in their image
Andrew Leonard
It was a week of rage, nostalgia and despair on the Internet.
Sure, you could say that about any week on the Internet. But last
week delivered some prime material. Check out this gamer exploding
in fury at the rumor that Google — “The King Midas of Shit!” — might
buy the hugely popular streaming gamer site Twitch TV. Or this sad
note from the founder of the venerable “community weblog” MetaFilter
explaining why a Google-precipitated decline in advertising revenue
had forced him to lay off three much beloved staffers. Or this
diatribe from a Facebook manager, savaging the current state of the
media.
All is not well on the Web. While the particulars of each outburst
of consternation and anger vary significantly, a common theme
connects them all: The relentless corporatization and centralization
of control over Internet discourse is obviously not serving the
public interest. The good stuff gets co-opted, bought out, or is
reduced to begging for spare change on the virtual street corner.
The best minds of our generation have been destroyed by web metrics,
dragging themselves across a vast wasteland in search of the next
clickbait headline.
[...]
Continua qui: http://www.salon.com/2014/05/26/the_internet_as_we_know_it_is_dying/