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'Remember the Internet': An Encyclopedia of Online Life

60 points| hunter-2 | 5 years ago |theatlantic.com

54 comments

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[+] dang|5 years ago|reply
The comments so far were replying superficially to the article title. I've changed the HN title above to the HTML doc title now, which describes the project that this article is actually about. Please either respond to the interesting substance or (always an option!) don't respond. A 5-second reaction to a 2-second title isn't usually very interesting.
[+] at_a_remove|5 years ago|reply
Hrm. I can only imagine the Yahoo! Chat room issue, or "What was IRC like in 1990?" edition. I could see a few on Myspace alone (here's to Tom, I hope he got some "fuck you money" out of the deal). And so many Livejournal communities!

I am older than the usual skew of the HN demographic and I can only say that a lot of this feels like surfing or stepping off of one escalator and onto another. Yes, you can do it smoothly but at some point the endless transition from one thing to another feels shallow, and the gossamer threads of personal relationships between you and someone else on a vanishing Internet community snapping might only be heard by the smallest of web spiders. Businesses shutter, call some place Paradise and kiss it goodbye, new moderators decide to "pivot" or the gentle incoming surf of Eternal September rises like a tsunami and washes it all away.

We may have become perversely attached to the impermanence of things and, if so, may be then treating one another with less depth than can be kind. Nobody names mayflies.

[+] ant_li0n|5 years ago|reply
I wasn't really into MySpace much in those days. I didn't have many friends and I never quite figured out how to make friends there. When Facebook came along, I was inundated with friends and the utility was lost on me there, too.

One piece of the early internet that I do grieve for is a MUD I played in the 90s. I remember when I first found it, and it was the only MUD I ever played.

I had heard about this awesome new game called Ultima Online, and there were some great blogs telling stories from the Alpha release. I signed up for the Beta (don't think I ever was accepted?) but in the meantime I scoured UO forums and that's where I found that MUD. I think I honestly only played it for about 2 years but those were absolutely some of the most fun times I ever had on the internet. I think at max the server only had 30 or 40 people on it, and the codebase must have been absolute garbage because it would lag out periodically and you'd lose connection or get killed.

I really wish that place had survived, or in the very least I wish it had been documented. Such an amazing thing, it makes me sad to think about.

Nowadays, we've come to appreciate the fact that things will disappear off the internet, and people are preserving them. I know, like the article, "it's not the same," and you can't go back in time by just viewing a site on the wayback machine. I'm still glad that people are doing this kind of work, preserving these stories.

[+] ArtWomb|5 years ago|reply
Seems to be quite a bit of early internet nostalgia floating through the noosphere. I happened to catch a bit of the House testimony of tech execs today during lunch, and it certainly feels that the winds are shifting.

In this vein, I can also recommend this Bloomberg series on the History of Napster. Kind of amazing how stubborn music industry execs and politicians can remain 20 years on. How prescient Steve Jobs was, yet again. And whether the days when a solitary coder in a dorm room could still disrupt an entire industry will be much more insurmountable ;)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OHVRItc38-c

[+] spideymans|5 years ago|reply
I get it. I’m too young to have used MySpace, Napster or Facebook[0]. The Wayback machine can tell me how those websites looked, but it can’t express the magic that made those services what they were.

[0] Yes Facebook is very much alive, and everyone I know has an account, but nobody actively uses the platform, and it feels completely vestigial at this point.*

[+] domano|5 years ago|reply
On the actual books page ( http://www.instarbooks.com/remember-the-internet.html ) i love the form field title animation. I thought it was just a gif, but the form fields are clickable.
[+] atticmanatee|5 years ago|reply
I think the idea of gathering these stories and sharing them is a good one, and certainly of value. That said, asking for 10$ per ebook may be a bit too much.

Best of luck to them.

[+] ehnto|5 years ago|reply
We don't, which can be a shame, but it's not like we used to be able to memorialize everyone's entire history of conversation and achievement so it's not a particularly new problem.
[+] raghuveerdotnet|5 years ago|reply
Agree on one level, but on the contrary, if we give the medium its due, it is much more conducive to memorialization than the pre-digitized/non-digitized world. I think this question might help future "anthropologist-like" professionals to go about understanding the developments much better than what we can do today. This is to say that there is significantly better contextual returns when asking this question in a digitised environment than in a non-digitized environment like in-person physical conversations and other similar events.
[+] 2OEH8eoCRo0|5 years ago|reply
Agreed. Not everything is worth saving. You aren't special. That's okay.
[+] stakkur|5 years ago|reply
There is no 'online life'. There's just life, and technology is only one part of it. Often, not a very important part.
[+] datameta|5 years ago|reply
To contrast, I'll take your comment and change a few words to reflect what many in our world today hold to be true - those to whom internet communication is the vast majority or the entirety of their socialization/hobbies/entertainment/news. I would argue this has never been more of a reality for more people than during the past year.

They might say something like:

There is no 'online life'. There's just life, and technology is a huge part of it. Often, the most important part.

[+] leptoniscool|5 years ago|reply
Google and facebook has around 100gb of data on me. I would just export it.
[+] tablespoon|5 years ago|reply
> Google and facebook has around 100gb of data on me. I would just export it.

The exports are garbage, though. What good is an archive of my comments when they don't contain any of the rest of the conversation, or even information about what they were in response to?

I'm literally looking at my FB comment export right now, and everything is "Tablespoon commented on his own post: Some sentence that makes little sense out of context."

[+] t0r0nat0r|5 years ago|reply
I feel this article creates a problem which doesn’t exist. Tons of stuff is bound to disappear, and it won’t make any difference as humanity will not have any way of processing these vast amounts of data retroactively.
[+] tomaszs|5 years ago|reply
Well maybe. However with social media taking so much time is everyone life a part of the life will also be forgotten. You could cut newspaper parts you liked, write a diary. No one told you you can't cut a piece of newspaper and preserve it. Or take a photo.

It was easy. Now it is almost impossible to save your experience. Applications block copying text from messages eg. Instagram. Block you from downloading images eg. Google, and from saving videos (eg. Tiktok).

Today technology leans towards blocking people of having a recall of what they see, hear and read online. It is hard to not have the feeling that we are losing something each day forever.

Not being able to go back to something that i have experienced is a loss to me.

I hope there will be some change around it, because I think that a person experiencing something has the right to preserve the experience. It was a default law. But now it is taken away from us.

No one is however protesting not noticing some kind of very personal, natural freedom is slowly taken away from us. The freedom of having a memory.

[+] markstos|5 years ago|reply
"How do we memorialize the current moment when it's constantly disappearing?"
[+] arkitaip|5 years ago|reply
Why not? Processing power and storage will be so vast and cheap that you could simulate the entire tech stack regardless of the platform, data formats, etc.
[+] luxuryballs|5 years ago|reply
Memorialize life online? To what end? Seems rather self important.
[+] tablespoon|5 years ago|reply
> Memorialize life online? To what end? Seems rather self important.

Why are we sometimes curious what our great grandparents did, and why don't we just put our dead in the trash heap with the rest of our waste?

[+] throwaway000345|5 years ago|reply
Why do we take snapshots of life at any place and time? Why do we study history at all? Because those who come after will benefit from knowing from whence they came.
[+] tifadg1|5 years ago|reply
Indeed. Of all the information I'm inadvertently exposed during the day, there's maybe 1 piece that's worth remembering tomorrow - maybe. I bet I'm with the absolute majority in this case as well.

In fact I've started the habit of deleting everything after a period of inactivity - be it computer history or social history - because it's either important and saved properly or it's not.

Certainly the world wouldn't loose heritage if random blogs, facebook, instagram, youtube went away, same as no one at large mourns the disappearance of usenet .. or myspace.

[+] Razengan|5 years ago|reply
> To what end?

The question to every answer.

[+] renewiltord|5 years ago|reply
Like when historians say "In this letter, Abraham Lincoln said". If the data is missing, coming generations won't know what Trump¹ said.

¹ Only using him as an example because he is an influential person who used an online medium to communicate

[+] DC1350|5 years ago|reply
Memorializing life online is the reason people get fired for saying homophobic stuff at a time when even most left wing politicians were anti gay marriage (>= 8 years ago). I don’t want this. I would use social media a lot more if everything was deleted after 24 hours because I can’t tell the future and I don’t know what will be taboo in 5 years
[+] aaroninsf|5 years ago|reply
Politics aside,

Telepath is premised on post ephemerality and AFAICT also does not allow text cut and paste.

No stopping screen shots etc but ftr.

* that there is no stopping screen shots etc. is arguably the real topic; until such time as there is true revolt, surveillance capital renders inert any idea of personal invisibility, opting out, or avoidance of future accountability for contemporary actions, as you suggest.

As well known in this forum, there is no escape, not using incognito mode, not using TOR, not opting out of the sociopathic Facebook ecosystem which happily profiles you based on tagging and public data... we live in the panopticon.

Those of us who are not stainless steel rats should moderate our expectations accordingly. :|

[+] slindz|5 years ago|reply
That is a fascinating insight to me. (the temporary social media thing)

Does such a thing exist?

I'm sitting here fighting urges to build a prototype.