• nosuchanon@lemmy.world
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    21 hours ago

    Seems like it’s mostly bots anyway. Hard to tell anymore what’s real comments and what is bot shill.

    Sadly, that’s a lot of the internet these days. The dead internet is becoming a reality.

    Just doing a search for reviews brings up so many AI written blogspam. Even the “trusted” sites from back in the day are scammy and advertising prices for whatever they review.

    • wltr@discuss.tchncs.de
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      21 hours ago

      It is indeed, but if we’d think about it longer … we couldn’t trust any review to be genuine in the past too.

      It wasn’t that bad though, that’s for sure. I do remember me buying some tech solely on the basis of having positive reviews. These days, I’d rather buy what’s cheaply (or for the sane price, depending on what I’m looking for) available online locally, and tweak from there.

      I found a nice essay on the topic recently, the boring internet.

      These days, not that genuine reviews are completely gone. They’re funnelled to some dark web channels (Instagram / Facebook et al), or live in private chats (e.g. me recommending something to friends). Personally, I’m trying to support others to start their own websites. For whatever hobbies they have. Unfortunately, not many are interested though. However, I believe that’s a matter of time before they realise that the social media platforms are optimised for engagement for the engagement’s sake. Which isn’t what I’m looking for. I’m totally ok with my blog being read by tens, not hundreds or thousands. Especially when these people are engaged in a mindful discussion, not just sending me millions of useless likes to pump my dopamine for no real reason.

      I believe we’d see the reborn internet (if it’s dead now) at some point.