The fun has been optimized out of the Internet

jprs 302 points 267 comments May 05, 2026
muddy.jprs.me · View on Hacker News

Discussion Highlights (20 comments)

functionmouse

I agree, but it's been said by all... make homebrew software for an old Nintendo console pick up cross stitching or weaving make an independent film with a friend; use stuff from your kitchen as props find a borderline functional instrument at your local thrift store write a 1 page short story in pen it's not enough anymore to merely criticize this bad time we're having

zacharycohn

We have entered the Eternal October.

theultdev

Skill issue. Been doing this for 20 years. I have less dev energy as an adult and dad, but I know what I want and how to make it. All of my ideas I'm able to make not only a proof of concept but an entirely polished app, all thanks to AI. I wouldn't say it's more or less fun than coding manual, apples to oranges, but it's certainly entertaining.

client4

A domain + compute has never been cheaper. That said, I think the signal-to-noise ratio on the modern internet makes discovery difficult.

brrrrrm

same can be said for a lot of things tho. e.g. nature used to be fun but then we discovered it all :’( I miss when ships literally sailed into the unknown and found surprising and novel things like hot peppers and pineapples

2ndorderthought

I don't agree entirely with the cleansing being done on behalf of AI. Sure the Internet was slowly descending into influence bot nets and sim card farms. But it couldn't scale to all corners of the internet. AI is the tool that destroyed that. Soon the amount of human content on the Internet will be so small it will be a place mostly for bots.

quxbar

I actually realized last night that everything that got me excited about the internet circa 2013 is actually way easier now, fun little one-off websites are far more doable, but we've lost the zeitgeist perhaps. It makes me wanna move back to NYC and go to BrooklynJS again.

UqWBcuFx6NV4r

How many of these will we get on a daily basis? Ten million nerds—7 million of which work for Meta—writing ten million blog posts about how nothing is fun anymore, and about 4 of them are doing anything fun.

3form

All other things aside, there definitely is some profound void which demise of Flash created and has never been filled again.

micromacrofoot

the fun is still there, it's just harder to find because of all the shit burying it

bluegatty

The Internet Is Not Yours - and - You Can Do What You Want. All the little niches can be your personal Web. There are innumerable thoughtful, cute, interesting bits out there, probably more than ever before. Craigslist is alive and well. PayPay is weird but who cares. The 'Grotesque Skyscrapers' of the web actually don't impair your view. That's the beauty of it. Go where you want. I would argue that's the darn point of the web, it's not for Curators it's literally for 'Whatever'.

jonas21

> I’ve been mourning the old Internet over the past year or two... As a kid on the Web from the early 2000s through the mid-2010s, we knew we were living through something special. It's funny because I knew lots of people in the early 2000s who were mourning the loss of the "old Internet" then. Kind of like how everyone thinks the music they listened to as a teenager is the best and it's all been downhill since.

1970-01-01

2026 and we still conflate the Internet with the WWW. As obscene as conflating culture and pop culture.

jexe

Lots of agreement and think there has been a lot written about the sterilization of something that was once beautiful and creative. Sad but inevitable when your best kept secret club isn't so best-kept anymore. Left off, and what we really want to know, is... ok, so what now?

joenot443

I think we just got older. People are still having a blast online, but they’re mostly kids or teenagers. Garrys Mod got replaced by Roblox, forums got replaced by Discord, blogs got replaced by vlogs. There’s still lots of fun and community still to be found online, people wouldn’t spend so much time on it if there wasn’t.

jwr

No, it's not! If you don't like the super-monetized over-optimized AI-generated walled garden we've-got-you-hooked experience — just don't participate in it and do your own thing. Start your own blog. Without ads, not to be "monetized", just for the fun of it. Write for yourself, not for "engagement". Do your thing.

CityOfThrowaway

In some sense, the fun pockets still exist of course. On the other hand, the algorithmic schelling points starve weird-ish corners of scale. The network effects + psychological draw of the single stream feeds is a powerful force. The algorithmic spaces still have lots of weird. Maybe more weird than ever. But they also feel more bled of community (or even iterated contact with the same people). It's a strange combination of facts. Maybe OPs post is not true in the literal sense, but it feels correct in the spiritual sense.

AlexAplin

Dead internet theory seems mostly proven by blog posts gesticulating about it. Digital creation is easier, more collaborative, and just as fun as it has ever been if you stop thinking in terms of mass audience and following the herd. I'll grant you: Flash is a hole that never fully healed back. Search engines might not be especially great for discovery now either. They weren't especially great for Geocities shrines either, though.

nemo

I've taken up gardening, I hike more, I go birdwatching every weekend, I practice pen and pencil drawing and sketching on paper, and I read more paper books these days since there's not much that's very compelling about the current web for me - at this point I'd rather be weeding than surfing the current web, it's great.

apsurd

So I love watching 50s-70s television shows: honeymooners, I love lucy, twilight zone, alfred hitchcock, Mission Impossible, Columbo. (recent MeTV lineup). I'm a millennial. It occurred to just the other day, the language they use, they say "dough" a lot. They need dough. Where's the dough. Any criminal is always involved with gambling and gangs and they need dough! And the normal working people storylines are pinned to their lack-of-dough situations. I remember the internet very fondly too. There's always an age of innocence but it just takes time to realize everyone just really needs and wants dough. And that's what happens.

Semantic search powered by Rivestack pgvector
8,303 stories · 78,303 chunks indexed