>>31951>Every website is connected to your personal identity nowCertainly a bad thing, although admittedly I wasn't around in the early days when sites didn't always try to connect to your Facebook or other account that eventually lead to your personal life. I even tried to make one once, since my friends all had them, and it wouldn't let me use a pseudonym -- well at first it did and then asked for all sorts of official identification documents.
I remember that French flag thing that they pulled on Facebook. It's ridiculous, that doesn't do anything for the victims nor does it help prevent what caused it in the first place. It's like a sort of mark of a do-nothing activism. Some people there might even think that their "likes" go and help aid whatever cause they support without them doing anything else.
>I know when I first came here /b/ was where you would go to see people act crazy and say things unlike anything you'd ever seeAn example would be nice. I mean you always hear about how /b/ was never good, but also how it is worse today. The chanology certainly started a degradation of the site because that put it on the map worldwide.
>newfags feel like they need to be jaded and insult everything to fit in.Ha, especially when you use a name. They go "kill yourself" ect.
http://techlatino.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/consumer-internet_042016-460x1024.pnghttp://archive.loveisover.me/t/thread/718648 This says it all, even now people are having huge difficulties finding things.
>Make art, share sources and creative worksStuff like this guy's game?
>>32000It would be cool to see those consolidated blogs/content places move away from places like tumblr, twitter and so on. For the most part there are plenty of webcomics which host on their own site and I hope it stays that way.
>Computer literacy will never increaseI always surprised on how difficult it is for people to use basic things as advanced search functionality, to read faqs or find it themselves