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by kbenson
4024 days ago
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I still don't see that. A centralized internet, or event a centralized "web" as has been distinctly defined elsewhere here, implies a single authority. That doesn't exist, and I don't see it existing in the future. Which email provider do you want to use? Pick from hundreds. Which social network do you want to use? Pick from from the tens of candidates. Which blog platform do you want to use, pick from hundreds again. > Without web servers and their admins, there is nothing, and that's a form of control in my opinion: you can easily shut down a website. There are webservers, and admins. That hasn't changed. There's been a shift to larger sites, but there's still plenty of small ones. You sill have the options to put your site at many different locations, or use a platform such as Facebook, Blogger or Wordpress. |
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What I'm talking about, is protocols that make services impossible to shut down, like bittorrent or bitcoin. That's what I mean by a decentralized internet. Those technologies are different and were made especially with the goal of avoiding control, and they are exactly the solutions to breaches of privacy. Here every computer is equal, and that's a true decentralized internet, in term of hardware AND software. What I was talking about, is generalizing bitcoin and bittorrent to messaging or even hosting databases.
Such software would run on many domestic computers that want to use it and host chunks of data in a redundant manner. The issue is authenticity and signing of data. But other than that, that's where the future is.
I'm sorry but I can't trust the html/http web one bit. HTML and javascript are awful technologies, which are slow to parse, building web browsers have been a race that resulted in no interesting progress and the web2.0 has been a joke. All those techs have been the base google have been making its money on, which also makes easy to mine, so to me centralization is a privacy issue.