You Need A Blog – Neville Park
elle's recent reading
An Open Letter to Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Who Thinks My Daughter Is a Tragedy
Just fucking use HTML
How the Blog Broke the Web
The Internet Used to Be a Place
Sarah Davis Baker
My Brain Finally Broke
Life is not daijoubu
is offline the new luxury?
none of these even need social media or only exist there
The age of being 'very online' is over. Here's why.
Oops, We Broke the Internet
Better a Pig Than a Fascist
It’s not too late to stop Trump and the Silicon Valley broligarchy from controlling our lives, but we must act now
Yeah, I Made It Lilac
pocket angel or demon
For a Student Who Used AI to Write a Paper by Joseph Fasano
Do politics belong at web events?
Gen Z is flocking to the one social media platform millennials didn't ruin
Why we are still using 88x31 buttons - ultrasciencelabs
ringfencing my self
AI: The New Aesthetics of Fascism
pzwang/lostweb: The Web We Lost, and What Comes Next
The Substack Dilemma: How Creators Are Inadvertently Fueling America's Failure
The Age of the Double Sell-Out
Now the culture is most exemplified by people whose entire end goal appears to be empty profiteering.
Rediscovering the Small Web
Privacy is Also Protecting the Data of Others
The open web as gift economy (Part 4)
The Cheap Web
Large parasocial platforms transformed the internet into a hostile
and impersonal place. They feed our FOMO to keep us clicking. They
exaggerate our differences for "engagement". They create engines for
stardom to keep us creeping. They bait us into nutritionless and
sensationalist content. Humanity cannot subsist on hype alone.
A case for unconditional giving | Henry From Online
[uZine 3] The Indie Web Manifesto
We invite the users to realize the essential role they play on the Internet: when they start their own website, when they send comments, criticisms or warm letters to the webmasters, when they exchange tips and hints in the newsgroups or by e-mail, they provide an independent and free source of information that others would like to sell and control.
Log Off: Why Posting And Politics (Almost) Never Mix - Aftermath