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This has been a strange year.

  • Flicsmo@rammy.site
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    1 year ago

    This certainly has been a strange year. The reckoning for these big unprofitable sites was inevitable in retrospect, but it’s wild how much is happening all at once.

    • The Cuuuuube@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      I think it has a lot to do with Silicon Valley Bank failing. These companies were running on loans with the promise of “the profits will come, some day.” Whether they meant to or not, many of our most relied upon services were being run as venture capital scams. Whether these companies turned profits or not didn’t matter so much as long as the executives were getting paid salaries, and could show the investors graphs that showed something was happening to grow the company, it didn’t matter if the service was bleeding investor money into the cloud giants like Amazon, Microsoft, and Google.

      And if we want to trace the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank back further, look no farther than Sam Bankman-Fried, Cara Ellison, and FTX. That one was very expressly a venture capital scam and a ponzi scheme rolled into one. I’m not going to say all cryptocoins are scamcoins, but I will happily say that enough of then are that the collapse of FTX has done permanent harm to the kinds of confidence people will be willing to put into digital fiat currencies. But what I more want to point out is that Sam Bankman-Fried was an intensified version of the kinds of people who have been showing growth charts and promising “profits, someday” while drawing massive salaries and bleeding investor money. He was playing video games on meetings and it was building his reputation, not harming it

      The investors who knew SBF was playing games in meetings were the investors who backed Reddit and Gfycat. Now that their SVB money and their FTX money is never coming back, they need to withdraw money from other investments, while at the same time Reddit and Gfycat are no longer receiving their stream of money to pay their cloud bills. The result? Corporate web 2.0 is dead as of July 1st, 2023. Sure. There are still corporate web 2.0 services shambling across this earth, including Twitter and Reddit whose actions yesterday marked the end of corporate web 2.0, but they’re zombies. Their hearts have stopped beating. They’re dead ans they don’t even know it.

      Whether you call it small web, web0, or my personal choice, Web 2.0.1, we are currently experiencing a rise of user owned web services that are picking up the slack left by corporate web 2.0 while in many ways rejecting web 3.0 as not being ready, or outright being a scam. We have a critical opportunity right now. We have the chance to realize that Mark Zuckerberg, Jack Dorsey, Alexis Ohanian, Stephen Huffman, or Elon Musk don’t have exclusive rights to enable us or empower us to interact online. They were holding a magic feather. We can use the tools of the fediverse to replace them. Its a little more work, yes, but so is everything when you take your own ownership of things. Making your own meals is more work than going to McDonalds, but its cheaper and healthier. Growing your own tomatoes is more work than going to the store, but you get the enjoyment of doing it and lesson your environmental impact. Owning your own home is more work than renting, but you get to keep the equity you build.

      This federated internet experiment is worth the work. While we’re still experiencing some reliance in the cloud providers, they’re at least providing us with a service we might not have been able to figure out on our own. Twitter, Facebook, and reddit, though? Their value was a shared hallucination. They were useful to us because we collectively convinced ourselves they were useful. Now we just need to convince ourselves that the bug fix to web 2.0, web 2.0.1, removing the corporations, is worthwhile.

      If you’re reading this, it means you’ve taken a big first step. Now take the second: tell a friend

      • baker@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        This was great to read, and reminds me of the joke that the stock market is just astrology for dudes.

      • MashingBundle@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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        1 year ago

        Great read, and right on the nose. Louis Rossman has a good video discussing this issue, especially Reddit’s role in all of it. Forgot the title, but its pretty recent.

        The “golden days” of internet social media platforms are gone. It was fun while it lasted, but these companies were BLEEDING venture capitalist money, and at some point they have to show a profit. That time is now, and it’s ugly.

      • Chipthemonk@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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        1 year ago

        Great reply. Thanks for the thoughtful write up. I think you are onto something here and I love your abilities for why we should adopt and further the fediverse.

      • fongaboo@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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        1 year ago

        As a Web 1.0 survivor, I can tell you it’s always been a house of cards. They keep trying to shoehorn a circular, communal, socialist invention (the Internet itself) into a square, capitalist hole. And it doesn’t work.

        Aron Swartz knew that, and maybe even Tom from MySpace. He knew when to get out and leave someone else holding the bag.

    • dan@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      They’re all jumping to get their bad news out while there’s a lot of other drama going on, in the hopes it’ll go less noticed.

    • dan@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Or it could be a really fucking great year. It could mark the end of commercialised social media and the beginnings of truly widespread adoption of free and open alternatives.

      • Flicsmo@rammy.site
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        1 year ago

        While this year has been painful for the data preservationist part of me, I also couldn’t be more excited for the rise of the small web and open platforms.

        • dan@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Yeah all that information disappearing is a huge disappointment.

          But realistically while Reddit Inc own that data it was always going to happen eventually. If it wasn’t the demand from LLMs pushing them to lock it away so they can monetise it, it’d have been a move like Twitter blocking non logged in users, or just them purging old data to save money or something.

    • FistfulOfStars@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Just wait until the “targeted ad” bubble pops because people realize it’s all a fraudulently inflated market with little to no true value.

      There will be wailing, and gnashing of teeth.

      • Clairvoidance@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Entirely speculation, but I think this might be why some of the dominoes are already falling?
        Like maybe all the ads pulled out of Twitter and saw that it didn’t impact the ad companies very much?
        If so, it could be the true end to Web 2.0

  • XanXic@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    They really were foolish to sell off Redgifs. Idk how they thought a normal gif hosting service was more profitable in the long run than their porn gifs site that caught on like wildfire. Everyone at the time was like ‘wtf, sell the gify knockoff’

    • BananaTrifleViolin@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Typical corporate moralising. Tumblr blocked adult content to keep advertisers and it’s corporate owners happy and the site died. Snapchat sold off the adult part of their Gif business even though - let’s face it - what is Snapchat used for?

      There seems to be a lack of acceptance in business that adults will be adults and you can’t sanatise the Internet to make it acceptable for advertisers or to impose the morals of minority religious groups on the majority.

      Gfycat is presumably very difficult to monetise. We’re in another wave of the history of dotcoms where companies and investors realise being an Internet based country is not a license to print money.

      Its not clear though how to make a free alternative to something like Gfycat. Someone has to pay for the hosting and bandwidth. Are we moving to a subscription based model for the Internet? For example the fediverse but with premium fast servers for those who pay and slow advertiser funded servers for this who don’t? Or Wikipedia like foundations for image hosting? Who knows.

      • Supermuff@feddit.de
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        1 year ago

        let’s face it - what is Snapchat used for?

        Mainly for chatting with friends. Who watches porn on Snapchat?

  • jray4559@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Man this year has just been a total collapse of everything:

    character,ai filtrations

    GPT slowly being neutered thanks to societal concerns

    Twitter being fucked by Mr. Elon “I know everything” Musk

    Imgur cleaning house for no reason

    Reddit dropping a nuke on 3rd Party apps

    Netflix killing password sharing

    Youtube feeling in to kill adblockers

    -and now gfycat is about to collapse entirely.

    What the actual fuck?

    • Vlhacs@reddthat.com
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      1 year ago

      Yet another step toward end game capitalism where nothing’s free/affordable anymore and only way to consume basic entertainment is either through a paid service or absolutely ridiculous ads everywhere. Where CEOs are squeezed by shareholders for every last extra % in their returns and in turn makes their product as anti consumer as possible except for the top 1% that can afford it.

    • sweBers@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Tech CEOs: Turns out the cloud costs money. Who knew? What next, credits are going to send me bills, lol? I already spent that money.

    • OsrsNeedsF2P
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      1 year ago

      Bonds are a really good deal right now, which makes more people want to loan the government money than each other. This leads to less people overleveraging, which most companies depend on for growth.

      All of the businesses you mentioned were overleveraged, so it’s understandable that they’d crack under the pressure

      (Note: The bonds market is referring to the US, but the effects are global)

    • TechnoBabble@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      All the VC money is being dumped into AI right now.

      Tech companies of yesteryear are starting to have to prove themselves in order to get funding, instead of relying on the wishy washy promises of old.

      We can already see with Lemmy, that this phenomenon is giving breathing room to FOSS services.

      I think it’s awesome, even if we’ll have to deal with growing pains for a while.

    • GunnarRunnar@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      What even was their business plan? I never understood how’d they make money. I guess advertising is always the answer but how…

      • n3m4c@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        That’s why this year everything is going down. VCs demand you start making some money or shut down and nobody bothered figuring out how to make money

        • VoxAdActa@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          I am not a finance guy; this is my kindergarten-level understanding of the situation:

          When the interest rates were hovering down around 0%, it was a no-brainer for VC firms to shotgun money out to everyone who walked past their office building. Most VC money doesn’t come from some rich dude’s pocket; it comes from banks and hedge funds and other deeply-market-tied entities. If any one startup they’ve invested in can win the profit lottery, the VCers will massively beat the rate of return they’d get for anything else. One big success can cover a dozen small failures, and, anyway, a business isn’t a failure until it’s a failure.

          Now that interest rates are rapidly moving higher, those startup investments are less of a good deal. VC money is more expensive. VC firms are starting to close out their positions on start-ups that aren’t beating them market, because they want to stick their money somewhere more reliably profitable.

          • Da_Boom@iusearchlinux.fyi
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            1 year ago

            The interest rates are letting the VCs turn the faucet off - it’s not forcing them. Higher interest rates mean they can make more money by letting it sit in high interest bank accounts rather than actually exercising the money.

            Meaning it’s less worth it to get out the old pocket book - still results in the same issues l guess though.

            High interest rates makes money and debts go up at the same time. Good for those with money, bad for those with loans.

      • homesnatch@lemmy.one
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        1 year ago

        Business plan… That was the problem, the business plan was just a bunch of cat pics in a binder. Cute, but not so profitable.

  • vqsv@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    The internet is dying. Federated is the last stand.

    • Cycro@vlemmy.net
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      1 year ago

      Web 2.0* is dying, and good riddance imo. I’m ready for the return of grassroots social media and decentralized communities.

      • OngoGablogian@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        I started out on usenet and shitty ezboard web forums. Web 2.0 collapsing is just another inflection point, there’s always a replacement

      • lemmyvore@feddit.nl
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        1 year ago

        The way things have been going I keep expecting to hear BBS’s are coming back.

  • 𝕸𝖔𝖘𝖘@infosec.pub
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    1 year ago

    I’ve never heard of gyfcat. Or so I thought. I opened the website and immediately went “oh! I know this site! I love this site! Oh wait… Aw man…” What a rollercoaster

    • meat_popsicle@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Good point, and this raises an interesting topic: is there much value to old data from a link aggregator like Reddit when so many services are no longer available and the old links go nowhere?

      Services like Facebook or Twitter are seemingly not as exposed to that type of issue since they’re less reliant on external content.

      • Perfide@reddthat.com
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        1 year ago

        Nope, not really. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve found a really old reddit thread with links I wanna check out only for them to be dead. With the services reddit rely on for content going down, this is only going to accelerate.

  • zedtronic@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Hey wait I’ve seen this one before!

    “ The dotcom bubble burst when capital began to dry up. In the years preceding the bubble, record-low interest rates, the adoption of the Internet, and interest in technology companies allowed capital to flow freely, especially to startup companies that had no track record of success.”