‘Enshittification’ is coming for absolutely everything::The term describes the slow decay of online platforms such as Facebook. But what if we’ve entered the ‘enshittocene’?

    • Carlos Solís
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      661 year ago

      And not just any paywall, a NINETY-NINE CANADIAN DOLLARS PER MONTH ONE. Granted the first month is a single dollar, but still, that’s a grand total of C$1090 A YEAR.

      • @RGB3x3@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Yeah, it’s $75 USD a month. Who the fuck do they think they are charging that much? I get 1Gbps internet for less than that. That’s 2 weeks worth of groceries. That’s YouTube Premium, Disney+, Netflix, and Max combined.

        Absolutely no way an online news outlet is providing even close to a quarter of that $75 in value.

        • @pivot_root@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          That’s 2 weeks worth of groceries.

          I would be lucky to get a week off of that. If all I ate was instant ramen and stovetop pasta for every single meal, I might be able to stretch it to two weeks.

          Absolutely no way an online news outlet is providing even close to a quarter of that $75 in value.

          The outlet is called Financial Times, and—if you think about it—they certainly do an excellent job in helping individuals manage their finances correctly. After seeing a $75 charge on my bank statement from a news outlet, I would never forget to cancel another promotional subscription again.

          • @pearable@lemmy.ml
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            1 year ago

            You can get a lot of rice and beans for 75 dollars. Definitely sounds like a rough couple weeks tho

        • @Womble@lemmy.world
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          61 year ago

          its the Financial Times, they know exactly who they are charging that much, and those people will spend that about of money without even noticing its gone.

    • @AA5B@lemmy.world
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      151 year ago

      Not just a paywall, but a cookie dialog taking up more than my whole phone screen, where you have to click into it to “reject all” (and it doesn’t reject all), just to get to the paywall

    • kratoz29
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      11 year ago

      It was on purpose, now you get the point clearer.

      • @linearchaos@lemmy.world
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        81 year ago

        Ohh no, it’s a real article, if you have bypasspaywall clean you can read it

        I’ll give em a little credit, the article is by Cory Doctorow

        But then we have this:

        "The internet isn’t more important than the climate emergency, gender justice, racial justice, genocide or inequality. But the internet is the terrain we’ll fight those fights on. Without a free, fair and open internet, the fight is lost before it’s joined."
        

        it costs a dollar to read the article.

    • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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      -351 year ago

      When your only claim to fame is jamming the word “shit” into other words…

      You need to milk all that ad money out of it you can.

      • Lvxferre
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        1 year ago

        Let’s skip for a moment the fact that, as other posters highlighted, Cory Doctorow was already famous before coining the word. Let’s pretend that his only achievement was indeed the concept of enshittification.

        Even then, it’s a big fucking deal. He noticed a rather nasty pattern in a system used by 2/3 of the world population, described it, labelled it, identified potential causes and solutions. It wasn’t just “lol lmao he jammed the word «shit» into another X-D”.

      • @apfelwoiSchoppen@lemmy.world
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        351 year ago

        FWIW Cory Doctorow was famous before coining that word. He’s done a lot of great work. You should research before saying things.

          • HACKthePRISONS
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            241 year ago

            he basically was all of EFF europe when i found him mid-2000s. he also worked boingboing for a very long time.

          • @Rolando@lemmy.world
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            201 year ago

            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cory_Doctorow

            Awards
            
                2000 John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer[91]
                2004 Locus Award for Best First Novel for Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom
                2004 Sunburst Award for A Place So Foreign and Eight More
                2006 Locus Award for Best Novelette for "I, Robot"
                2007 Locus Award for Best Novelette for "When Sysadmins Ruled the Earth"
                2007 The Electronic Frontier Foundation Pioneer Award[92]
            
            For Little Brother
            
                2009 John W. Campbell Memorial Award[93]
                2009 Prometheus Award[45]
                2009 Sunburst Award[46]
                2009 White Pine Award[94]
                2018 Inkpot Award[95]
            
            For Pirate Cinema
            
                2013 Prometheus Award[45]
            
            For Homeland
            
                2014 Prometheus Award[45]
            
            • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Yeah, I saw those on Wikipedia…

              Honestly the only impressive bit was an xkcd character is based on him.

              Like, you know it’s not amount the amount of awards, it’s the quality?

              Like those Prometheus awards, those are just for libertarians and they have like five winners a year.

      • @linearchaos@lemmy.world
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        71 year ago

        CD is a beast. One hell of a great guy. I have actually donated money to some of his more worthy causes before.

        Ft It’s kind of a s*** hole though. And for the paywall to abruptly block you outright not a single word not a hook, which is kind of weird because it’s a little bit against what he stands for I know it’s not apples to apples…

        I read the article. It’s kind of disappointing, somewhat of a Nothing Burger.

      • Carlos Solís
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        231 year ago

        Paying for content: fair enough

        Paying almost A THOUSAND DOLLARS A YEAR for content: barely worth it

        • @deczzz@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          11 year ago

          That’s a value proposition. Explain to me how you would price this for it to be fair? If you don’t like it, don’t buy it. This has nothing to do with enshitification.

    • Lycerius
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      71 year ago

      A paywall you find only after you have to manually reject cookies. Done? Okay, here’s your paywall!

  • Rayquetzalcoatl
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    141 year ago

    Corporate greed is ruining everything, as per… But hey! We have a cool edgy new tech term for it now!

  • @hperrin@lemmy.world
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    91 year ago

    We just need to go back to paying for services. Free free free everything forever is not a sustainable business model. That’s why the big players just sell you to advertisers instead. And everyone is getting pretty grossed out about how much data that actually takes on you, so we’re passing privacy laws. Those laws mean these services can’t be free anymore.

    Good. They shouldn’t be free.

    • Constant Pain
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      91 year ago

      It is not a sustainable business model because when it becomes paid people will realize they don’t need them.

    • @Pizza_Rat@lemmy.world
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      91 year ago

      Yes. This is the silent problem of enormous wealth inequality in the US. As the middle class disappears, fewer people are able to pay small fees to contribute to things like local news, community organizations, and online services.

      • @Krauerking@lemy.lol
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        11 year ago

        Our dollars are not as important as those who can pay obscene amounts of money for the better stuff. Same way the death of first class and the selling of private transportation is such a danger.

        It’s also not great that they just sorta expect the trickle in of a poor populace who combined still make a great share of the income and think their stranglehold is so tight that the money will never stop coming in.

        It’s piss poor management from the late generations of the wealthy. Didn’t have to build or think about maintaining the economic machines and just saw how it could work for them to make them unimaginably wealthy and safe forever.
        We are coming to the rest of if that’s true and I think entropy of nature itself will prove the answer is no.

    • @TwilightVulpine@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Streaming services are paid and they are enshittifying just as fast as anything else, if not faster. No, it’s not that we aren’t paying enough and this is a desperate measure to make up for our neglect. This is corporate greed. Even when they have sustainable business models, that isn’t enough.

      Also, I worry how societal inequality might increase if the whole internet becomes subscription based, if people can’t get informed or communicate without paying (more than their internet service, even)

      • @hperrin@lemmy.world
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        31 year ago

        Streaming services were charging way under what they needed to to be sustainable when everyone is on them. Netflix for $10 a month with all the content is not sustainable. Think about how much mom and dad paid every month for cable. The media industry costs money to run.

        But yes, a portion of it is corporate greed.

        That said, yo ho yo ho, 🏴‍☠️

        • @TwilightVulpine@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I straight up do not believe that a company can provide a service for over a decade and not be charging enough to be sustainable. The CEO can come and say this to my face and I’ll call them a LIAR. One or a couple years I could buy the idea of investors holding it up for the sake of establishing the business, but why would they be accepting losses for such a long time? This is funky accounting. I’m more inclined to think “it was not sustainable, we need to charge more” is just something they say when they think they can get away with squeezing more money from customers.

          • @hperrin@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I didn’t say they were operating at a loss, I said they were unsustainable. They’ve been profitable since 2003, but their profit relies on content. With everyone else pulling their content, their cash flow needs to be huge to produce content they can use to attract customers. $10 per subscriber isn’t enough income to sustain the cash flow needed to produce that much content, so they raise their prices to become sustainable. When they relied on licensing content from rights holders, their expenses were smaller, but they have been losing the ability to rely on that.

    • @BigMacHole@lemm.ee
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      61 year ago

      EXACTLY! That’s why Streaming Services, Online Shopping and tech producers like Apple have NOT begun to Enshittify!

      • @hperrin@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        As far as online shopping goes, if you’re getting free shipping and returns, there’s your answer.

        And streaming services are just becoming cable again, so that’s not really surprising. Netflix with all the movies and shows for $10 a month was completely unsustainable.

    • @SkyNTP@lemmy.ml
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      551 year ago

      Enshitification was coined by Cory Doctrow specifically for the tech space, because the tech space is uniquely poised to constantly shift and tweak a service-based product to manipulate users, creators, and the paying customers.

      I call this enshittification, and it is a seemingly inevitable consequence arising from the combination of the ease of changing how a platform allocates value, combined with the nature of a “two sided market,” where a platform sits between buyers and sellers, holding each hostage to the other, raking off an ever-larger share of the value that passes between them.

      https://pluralistic.net/2023/01/21/potemkin-ai/

      This is on top of the normal problem of greed. Now I didn’t read the article because it is pay walled (go figure). Is this article actually drawing a correct comparison to the definition of enshitification above, or is it just lazily ascribing the phenomenon of greed to that word?

      • Corgana
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        71 year ago

        Enshitification was coined by Cory Doctrow specifically for the tech space

        You’re not wrong it was coined this way, but he has referred to the process in other arenas where monopolies exist:

        But it’s not just tech that faces the curse of bigness: your bank, your insurer, your beer company, the companies that make your eyeglasses and your athletic shoes — they’ve all run out of lands to conquer, but instead of weeping, they’re taking it out on you, with worse products that cost more.

        Enshittification follows monopoly as sure as night follows day.

      • @nyctre@lemmy.world
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        101 year ago

        Yes, because the first guy who lit a fire on purpose was like: “you want warm? You give food! Else fuck off!”

        /s

        • @GeneralInterest@lemmy.world
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          01 year ago

          To be fair, he may well have been like that. Humans have been selfish bastards since the dawn of time. And maybe this is why we need good government regulations - because human nature is greed. Any company in a position of power will just leech as much money as they can, if nobody is going to stop them.

          • @floofloof@lemmy.ca
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            21 year ago

            If you think human nature is greed and selfishness, you’re falling for capitalist indoctrination. Humans have the capacity for greed or selfishness but it has not always been the dominant principle of human societies. But capitalists want us to believe it’s just “human nature” to be an asshole so there’s no viable alternative to a greed-based society.

            • @GeneralInterest@lemmy.world
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              11 year ago

              I’m not trying to justify unlimited greed, nor do I mean that we should permit unlimited greed. I’m saying the opposite of that - I think we should have laws to curtail unlimited greed.

              But I do still think greed and selfishness are human nature, because when I look at humans, I consistently see selfishness and greed. Maybe this means I’m a pessimist but I think it’s just realistic. If humans weren’t inherently greedy and selfish then there would be no need for laws that punish theft.

              As for whether greed and selfishness have been dominant in human societies… it looks like the rich and powerful in society, throughout history, never gave up their power and wealth unless they were made to do so.

      • @deczzz@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        -111 year ago

        I wonder what arguments people have to justify a downvote. Polarized either/or views. Capitalism is a great idea if regulated. Look to history and find good examples of societies that aren’t based on capitalism. They don’t exist.

        I agree and value the Marxist analysis of capitalism. I’m a socialist. However, I don’t think that a Marxist economy would work. Social responsible capitalism works. Capitalism run amok doesn’t. Unfortunately, it is getting out of control, especially in the USA.

        • @TengoDosVacas@lemmy.world
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          111 year ago

          What we have here is a capitalism that is devoid of the creation of goods and services; today’s capitalism is just neofeudalism in which the capitalist just collects rent without creating anything. This thread is confusing capitalism woth commerce.

        • @EchoCT@lemmy.ml
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          21 year ago

          If you were a socialist you’d know what dialectical materialism is and not say something like “Marxist economy”.

        • @jkrtn@lemmy.ml
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          11 year ago

          What is the solution for when capitalism purchases the regulators? You can purchase SCOTUS rulings for laughably cheap and legislation for even less. If you’re really into it, you can spend several decades building up a propaganda network so low information clowns will vote in an obvious con man. He’ll drop corporate taxes down to zero, give trillions in handouts, and dismantle pesky shit like the EPA. Profits!

  • @PeterPoopshit@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    The tech world is going downhill fast. Anything that isn’t currently obtainable through only foss means isn’t going to be attainable by the average person for much longer.

    The tech things most people currently enjoy will soon become entirely unaffordable to anyone not made of money. Anything that you aren’t willing to switch to an open source alternative for, prepare to learn to live without it.

    I even self host my own music streaming. I never had a streaming service, not even in 2012 when Netflix was all the rage. I don’t even own a windows compatible pc. I don’t even know what modern ms office looks like. I use my home network more than I use the actual internet just about.

    • @GluWu@lemm.ee
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      91 year ago

      I’ve been trying to remember and watch all the old YouTube videos I loved before they disappear either completely or behind a paywall that I won’t pay.

      Let’s get some shoes. Let’s get some shoes. OMG! Shoes!

      All of that will be gone soon. Not just the space where people can let their creativity flow, but where there is nearly 2 decades of that kind of creativity archived.

      • Ech
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        21 year ago

        I actually just went through my old favorites (that are still accessible) and downloaded them with jdownloader last weekend.

        • @GluWu@lemm.ee
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          11 year ago

          :( I should probably archive anything I ever enjoyed. I wish I had put more time into remembering what those all were, I was too busy just having fun. I had entirely forgotten about Liam Kyle Sullivan, including that was what his name was, until very recently. Muffins was uploaded in 2007, am I officially old? Pre2010 YouTube was so simple. I remember uploading runescape videos to YouTube before Google bought it.

          • Ech
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            11 year ago

            Pretty much. Even if seemingly every website wasn’t diving into anti-user nonsense, things online don’t last forever. I think it’s worthwhile to make a backup of pretty much anything you feel is worth the effort and space.

            • @GluWu@lemm.ee
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              11 year ago

              I wonder if I should put the effort into making a desktop and/or android UI that downloads every video you watch in a format you specify for archive(so you could watch in whatever res but archives in 1080 or lower for space). Fork something like free-tube and run python for yt-dlp to archive. It would just be a font end for existing back end, and would probably be less effort than manually downloading anything I feel important. Just delete anything I feel isn’t when it’s in the archive folder.

              • Illecors
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                11 year ago

                I remember there being a an mpv extension for firefox to watch youtube in mpv locally - you might want to look for inspiration there.

                There’s also freetube that might be extended in an easier way.

    • @Mango@lemmy.world
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      81 year ago

      What can’t I do with FOSS though?

      Whatever you’re about to say, let’s crowd fund it. I’m not even kidding.

          • @trougnouf@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            There are open models that one can download on HuggingFace and run locally, but they are not as good as ChatGPT4 which has had insane® amounts of resources thrown at.

            • @Mango@lemmy.world
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              01 year ago

              But don’t we have to go through openai for gpt anyhow? Always have a browser for that.

              • @trougnouf@lemmy.world
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                21 year ago

                I don’t understand your question. GPT is proprietary and hosted by OpenAI. There are other large language models (LLM) that one can download (or even train if they are open-source or at least have a descriptive scientific paper and open training data) and host themselves, but they are not as powerful.

      • @deczzz@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        51 year ago

        Use industry software standards. Adobe, Autodesk etc etc. I know, these solutions sucks, but it is the world people live it. Most Lemmy people are into tech for the sake of tech. You are technological literate to the highest degree. Understand and critique developments in tech. Very important work! However, a graphical designer probably isn’t that literate and wouldn’t be able to do work in a Foss environment. Yes, 1 in a 1000 might use Gimp but good luck colabbing with other people in the industry.

        • @Mango@lemmy.world
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          21 year ago

          Yeah I know Gimp doesn’t use(or didn’t last time I checked) CMYK and as someone who does QA for flexographic printing, I know how that’s important.

          You’d think the world would put some effort into getting away from Adobe. All my homies hate Adobe.

          So. Why don’t we crowd fund our way to better solutions for these things?

          • lemmyreader
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            41 year ago

            Krita is actually a very professional choice for some things people think they need Adobe products for. And it looks like Krita has CMYK support. Giving Krita more attention that it deserves would be welcome.

    • @jkrtn@lemmy.ml
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      141 year ago

      If everyone who complained about ads in Prime and Netflix canceled their accounts, then Prime and Netflix would be motivated to remove their ads.

      • @LWD@lemm.ee
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        21 year ago

        Wouldn’t this also cause them to charge more to make up for lost paying customers? 🤔

        • @jkrtn@lemmy.ml
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          31 year ago

          Certainly possible, but there is a limit to what they can charge before losing customers on price as well as on principle.

      • @Blackmist@feddit.uk
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        21 year ago

        I did for Prime.

        Netflix didn’t put ads in for me, since I was already on the “4K” plan. Didn’t they just throw in an even lower tier for their ad version?

        • @AA5B@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I dropped it with the new policy on sharing, although I didn’t wait for their follow through. As a divorced parent with kids, including one in college, if your family plan doesn’t work for my family because they may sometimes live in other locations, you’re out. I was ok paying for the family plan, but if you’re going to hassle one kid when he’s at my ex’s or the other at school, how is that worth my money?

          • @Blackmist@feddit.uk
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            11 year ago

            Yeah, I agree that’s a crap policy for any family that may be spread over more than one household like that.

            Do they actually cut you off if you ignore them and carry on doing it anyway?

            • @AA5B@lemmy.world
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              21 year ago

              I didn’t wait for them to follow through. I decided I didn’t have to spend money with a company that was going to treat me as a criminal

      • @T00l_shed@lemmy.world
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        61 year ago

        The minute I got the prime notification I went and canceled immediately. And same with Netflix, I wish more people would do the same.

      • @AA5B@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Fr the longest time, I got Prime because of Prime. The ebooks and videos were just an included bonus. The bonus going to shit doesn’t change what the original decision was based on.

        Prime video has been on this road for a long time, as videos with ads took o paver more and more of its Home Screen. It got more and more annoying clicking past the clutter of “FreeVee” videos to find stuff I wanted to watch, but I guess it’s all stuff to click past now

    • @unreasonabro@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      “See? Look!”

      This article brought to you by the ultimate enshittifier of news, the Financial Times. The reason’s in the name!

    • @Abnorc@lemm.ee
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      171 year ago

      They really meant it!

      By reading this comment, you consent to cookies btw.

  • @stockRot@lemmy.world
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    101 year ago

    How has healthcare software like MyChart been enshittified? It’s probably the tech I care the most about and the tech no one seems to talk about.

    • @Cracks_InTheWalls@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      I would love to see someone discuss any enshitification trends with EHR software, as well as any initiatives to bolster FOSS stuff like OSCAR for hospital use cases (far as I know, it’s pretty much just used at the clinic level, with more and more uptake of proprietary solutions for that use case as well here in Canada [obligatory Fuck Telus]).

      https://fammed.mcmaster.ca/oscar-emr/

    • @SpaceCowboy@lemmy.ca
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      41 year ago

      I’m not familiar with that particular piece of software. It may not be enshittified… yet. But it only take someone in the company to makes it to show the can make some ad revenue by plopping a bunch of ads on the site. Or even worse, they could start selling the data, which is particularly worrisome given it’s medical data. Think about how much pharma companies spend on advertising and how valuable it would be to them to be able to do targeted advertising directed at people the know have conditions that they’re selling treatments for.

      The data on a site like that is ridiculously valuable. Sooner or later someone may decide to give a marketing company contracted by a big pharma company just one little peak at some data.

        • Captain Aggravated
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          51 year ago

          It’s only illegal if you can’t afford the fines. As businesses routinely prove, if your company is big enough they just budget for fines.

          • @ShunkW@lemmy.world
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            21 year ago

            HIPAA fines are massive for now. So the cost risk doesn’t work for them yet. But I’m sure some politicians will find a way to make it just the cost of doing business soon.

        • @afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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          11 year ago

          They will find a way around it. Maybe they will claim it doesn’t count because it is tried to metadata and not an individual person.

          • @expr@programming.dev
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            51 year ago

            HIPPA is no joke and companies actually don’t fuck around with it. It’s not worth it. It’s one of the few pieces of consumer protection out there that has real teeth. Under HIPPA, you are expressly forbidden from using personal health information for anything unrelated to that patient’s care, and companies can and are fined heavily for violating it.

    • KᑌᔕᕼIᗩ
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      81 year ago

      Enshitification comes because of the unsustainable growth required by Capitalism in order to appease shareholders. Line must always go up!

      • @AA5B@lemmy.world
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        21 year ago

        Enshittification comes from failure of government to establish a market where capitalism acts for the benefit of society. It comes from failure of antitrust regulations, failure of consumer protections, failure of broadcaster fairness doctrine, failure to reward a sustainable business model rather than simply maximizing quarterly profit, failure to support public broadcasting, failure to mandate ethics/honesty/transparency, failure to incent public good such environmental responsibility.

    • @pmk@lemmy.sdf.org
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      71 year ago

      If ads are pushed into ed(1), then it truly is everything. But, as long as Theo is the leader of OpenBSD, we will always have a free operating system.

  • @TengoDosVacas@lemmy.world
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    291 year ago

    I often wonder: can we start over? Like, can we just do MySpace again?..or have another YouTube that’s like before Google bought it? If we hate how tech bros have destroyed the fun, is there a way to redux the pre-tech bro wonder years?

      • Clot
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        51 year ago

        while peertube is a solution, and I really hope it succeeds, the content and creators arent there, anyways we can always use piped.

      • @astronaut_sloth@mander.xyz
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        91 year ago

        Not necessarily. The Free and Libre Open Source Software (FLOSS) movement is a thing. Most of the Fediverse is FLOSS, and I doubt there’s anyone who can take Lemmy or Mastodon closed source and buy every instance and then stop pop-up instances. It does require quite a bit of work, though, so it is difficult.

        I think the real challenging thing is that a great FLOSS service needs to attract attention and care. When I bring up Fediverse/FLOSS alternatives to software my friends complain about, I’m met with lukewarm-at-best reactions, generally due to networking effects (I think).

      • lemmyreader
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        41 year ago

        I think the Fediverse is not doomed any time soon. In other areas XMPP is an example of an open source software based protocol since long and still being around, with active projects, and attempts to make things easier, like Snikket : https://snikket.org

    • @afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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      31 year ago

      Me personally I have just accepted this is the way it is going to be. The company makes a good product and then it stops making a good product, I move on.

  • Resol van Lemmy
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    211 year ago

    It was coming for absolutely everything since 2013 at least.

    I will never forget the day when Creative Suite was no longer a thing. I will never forget the day when Apple flattened iOS. I will never forget the day when the Xbox One was announced.

    Can you believe their modern products are basically a continuation of what they started back in 2013? This is why it’s the worst year of all time.

    • @Krauerking@lemy.lol
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      111 year ago

      Oh man we should really do a review of the most recent worst year limited to just the last 200 years or else we are competing with the black Plague or the final boss of 536 C.E.

      • Resol van Lemmy
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        101 year ago

        Everyone would be talking about… certain events related to WW2.

        Thanks a lot, mustache man.

        • @Krauerking@lemy.lol
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          51 year ago

          Hmmm touche… Men with mustaches are gonna be a lot of years sticking points if we cast that big of a net. It’s shocking how nice things were on the base level the last few decades in terms of mass deaths.

          Does feel like we are priming ourselves for a whallop though. So maybe worst foreshadowing year? Or worst step back year in the last 100 years?

          • Resol van Lemmy
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            21 year ago

            This got me thinking for a bit.

            I’m guessing these last two statements are kinda correct.

          • Twitches
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            21 year ago

            We would have to look at death percentages to population numbers. We might just have more people dying because of population is larger. Dieing of stupid shit has to be higher.

          • Resol van Lemmy
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            11 year ago

            Not that mustache man, the Austrian one who knows how to paint. I think he has a friend that wanted to “conquer Asia” or something.

    • @Krauerking@lemy.lol
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      1 year ago

      We have been shockingly stagnant for some time now but it’s been creeping for a while now. Decades of slow but building shittiness.

      The initial investment and machines put in motion and more and more the only goal was to scrape as much profitability from them.

      Now that the tech is struggling to advance in meaningful leaps and bounds that the populace can easily be pushed into following cause it truly just keeps getting better we are really in the shit zone. But Companies have realized they are so big that your options are work with them for whatever scraps they feel like giving, or don’t work at all cause who else is there.