I find it particularly disappointing as a conclusion because its a strange curveball on what otherwise seemed to be the obvious conclusion it was building to: if we want the open web to survive then it has to be convenient to use. We need to grow up from our RTFM tendencies and build technology that people can intuit how to use without a manual. Approximately nobody wants to spend their time reading a manual to learn to operate a chat application or publish a blog. We even have an opportunity afforded to us by enshitification and declining software quality. The bar is lowering on being the easiest option!
Many of us work at companies that aren't moving the needle in the right direction, and in our free time, we seem to be content discussing AI-generated think pieces and press releases from AI vendors all day. As I write this, in the top ten HN stories, I see press releases from Deepmind, Cursor, Tailscale, and Qwen. Even when commercial stories don't dominate and someone's passion project makes it to the top, how often do we drop the author a personal note or offer others words of encouragement?
It's something we like as an abstract idea, but in reality, we don't lift a finger to preserve it. By the way, I'm guilty too. When I'm done writing this comment, I'll probably doomscroll social media for a while.
Surprising that you'd admit to being part of this conspiracy of stupidity.
But youtube is actually pretty great with the appropriate browser extensions and accessory scripts.
Feel prophetic in regards to the fate of democracy.
boca_honey•14m ago