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Rob L'Heureux's avatar

I largely endorse the sentiments, but it seems straightforward there will be walled gardens for humans, free for all zones, and AI only zones. Human-only zone access will require meatspace authentication, which in and of itself sounds bad and creepy but spam bots keep forcing us there. The challenge I see for any Web 2.0 platform selling their data is ensuring it remains authentically human and not just incestuous AI tokens. So they’ll be the first to figure out authentication, either through whitelisting humans, developing sentinel AIs to flag inauthentic behavior (a losing battle but possibly a government mandated and funded endeavor for top model labs), or by adding enough marginal costs that it would make AI bots there uneconomical. No matter what, it’s going to be different.

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ZZ Universe's avatar

A good peace. Things will undoubtedly change as they always do. Some for the better, some for the worse. We'll adapt our understanding, expectations, and how we interact on the internet as we go along, with a lost, nostalgic generation probably left behind unable to adapt. In short, different but the same as always. It'll be alright. ;)

I grew up on web 1.0 and was very active on web 2.0. Nowadays, I use it for information and entertainment, as I find most of the rest (forums, social media...) as a giant waste of time.

We can't trust information about anything from authorities, news sources, or random people internet dwellers and it's been that way for a while. AI has nothing to do with it. We'll learn to recognize and discard that nonsense soon enough, and then create specific trusted sources of information. Adaptation is the name of the game.

I won't miss web 2.0, but the original, wild west web 1.0 will forever remain in my heart as a special time in our history. Alas, it was never meant to last. Nothing ever does.

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