You Have Reached the End of the Internet (2006)
Key topics
The nostalgic thread "You have reached the end of the internet" has sparked a wave of reminiscence about the early days of the web, with commenters wistfully recalling the heyday of sites like Fark, Homestar Runner, and Albino Black Sheep. As they reflect on the internet's evolution, some are drawing parallels between past predictions and current realities, citing science fiction works like Ender's Game and Metal Gear Solid 2 that eerily foreshadowed today's online landscape. While some commenters are bittersweet about the internet's transformation, others are cautioning against overly optimistic views of emerging technologies, pointing out that history tends to repeat itself. The discussion feels particularly relevant now as it highlights the cyclical nature of technological progress and the importance of learning from the past.
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- 01Story posted
Dec 20, 2025 at 12:10 PM EST
14 days ago
Step 01 - 02First comment
Dec 20, 2025 at 3:53 PM EST
4h after posting
Step 02 - 03Peak activity
18 comments in 12-18h
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Step 03 - 04Latest activity
Dec 23, 2025 at 1:41 AM EST
11 days ago
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For me the high point was Fark or maybe Homestar and the low point was obviosuly Facebook... or maybe the end of Democracy.
[1]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eKl6WjfDqYA
Let's change that here and now! :)
I was one of the optimists in the very early 2000s when I attended a talk by Columbia professor Eli Noam. In 2002, he wrote an article in the Financial Times called "Why the internet is bad for democracy" which essentially predicted the world is we know it.
I immediately saw that he was right, at least with regard to the fact that it COULD turn out as it has, in fact, turned out. He fundamentally changed my view, way back then. In 2005 a version was published in a more academic context: “Why the Internet is bad for democracy.” Communications of the ACM 48(10): 57–58 (2005).
Here's the FT version: https://www.citicolumbia.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/Why-...
"Free access to information is indeed helpful, which is why the internet undermines totalitarianism. But it undermines pretty much everything else, too, including democracy."
Indeed.
Any idea if he's published anything recently? A quick Google seems to show a textbook a few years back and then not much recently.
History repeats
BTW the statement about democracy is not a lie - everyone knows some big and small revolutions happened after someone's post in social networks. Also such things as anonymous news sources, torrents and bitcoin has democraticized a whole lot of things in our lives.
Voting as we have it, is a highly abstract, meta "democracy", with 'the will of the people' effecting a meaningless level of force on the tiller. As per the design.
https://www.wired.com/story/weight-of-the-internet/
"I beat the internet. The last guy was hard."
https://doctorsensei.com/how-to-get-off-the-internet.html
https://youtu.be/_uXtWIg_A7M?si=h0FSN79T5SDoUuGm
http://endinter.net/