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chongliyesterday at 11:12 PM5 repliesview on HN

I prefer a Dark Forest theory [1] of the internet. Rather than being completely dead and saturated with bots, the internet has little pockets of human activity like bits of flotsam in a stream of slop. And that's how it is going to be from here on out. Occasionally the bots will find those communities and they'll either find a way to ban them or the community will be abandoned for another safe harbour.

To that end, I think people will work on increasingly elaborate methods of blocking AI scrapers and perhaps even search engine crawlers. To find these sites, people will have to resort to human curation and word-of-mouth rather than search.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dark_forest_hypothesis


Replies

JamesTRexxtoday at 1:28 AM

It would be nice to regain those national index sites or yellow page sites full of categories, where one could find what they're looking for only (based) within the country.

cal_denttoday at 1:44 AM

This is the view I mostly subscribe to too. That coupled with more sites going somewhere closer to the something awful forum model whereby there is a relatively arbitrary upfront free that sort of helps with curating a community and added friction to stem bots.

JKCalhountoday at 3:24 AM

Lets all just get together and go bowling, shall we?

__turbobrew__today at 2:53 AM

Discord fills some of the pockets of human interaction. We really need more invite only platforms.

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ares623today at 1:27 AM

I've been thinking about this a lot lately. An invite only platform where invites need to be given and received in person. It'll be pseudonymous, which should hopefully help make moderation manageable. It'll be an almost cult-like community, where everyone is a believer in the "cause", and violations can mean exile.

Of course, if (big if) it does end up being large enough, the value of getting an invite will get to a point where a member can sell access.

show 1 reply