Toilet Theory of the Internet

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Not news, it's an opinion piece from The Atlantic that made me smile. Take it fwiw.

The Toilet Theory of the Internet​

Allow me to explain my toilet theory of the internet. The premise, while unprovable, is quite simple: At any given moment, a great deal of the teeming, frenetic activity we experience online—clicks, views, posts, comments, likes, and shares—is coming from people who are scrolling on their phones in the bathroom.

Toilet theory isn’t necessarily literal, of course. Mindless scrolling isn’t limited to the bathroom, and plenty of idle or bored swiping happens during other down moments—while waiting in line or sitting in gridlocked traffic. Right now, somebody somewhere is probably reading an article or liking an Instagram post with a phone in one hand and an irritable infant in the other.

The toilet theory is mostly a reminder to myself that the internet is a huge place that is visited countless times each day by billions of people in between and during all the mundane things they have to do. As a writer, I use this framework to check my ego and remember that I have precious little time to hook a reader with whatever I’m trying to get them to read—but also that my imagined audience of undistracted, fully engaged readers is an idealized one. I’m distracted just like everyone else: Sometimes I read deeply, but the majority of my nonwork surfing involves inattentively scrolling through clicky articles to find the morsel that catches my eye, or pecking out some typo-riddled phrase about a home-improvement product into Google while walking from the parking lot into Lowe’s and nearly getting hit by a vehicle.

More:

 
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Sounds to me like the MSN liars are amping up for a stronger government-censorship campaign for the InterWebZ.
 
Can I get 5 minutes of peace while I drop a duece or does it need to be published every time I make a doodie?
 

More......................

‘What many of us feel’: why ‘enshittification’ is Macquarie Dictionary’s word of the year​

“We’re all living through the enshittocene, a great enshittening, in which the services that matter to us, that we rely on, are turning into giant piles of shit,” author Cory Doctorow said earlier this year.

In 2022, Doctorow coined the word “enshittification”, which has just been crowned Macquarie Dictionary’s word of the year. The dictionary defined the word as follows.

“The gradual deterioration of a service or product brought about by a reduction in the quality of service provided, especially of an online platform, and as a consequence of profit-seeking.”

Social media users, if they don’t know the word, will viscerally understand the concept, the way trolls and extremists and bullshitters and the criminally vacuous have overtaken the platforms.

Read on:

 
Part of the enshittification is, that crudities like that newly-coined term, are celebrated.

When I was younger, I had a potty mouth. Older people objected. Now, in my dotage, I understand why.

I'm not going to f__kin' celebrate the motherf__kkin' coarsening of the general public dialogue and vocabulary...where the MF bomb is an all-purpose adjective and modifier....and reference to feces is constant, without check.
 
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