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Oh my goodness I have unlimited love for this ‘curriculum’ for ‘how to use the internet again’. It’s basically the kind of thing that the Mozilla Webmaker team (me included) would be doing if it were still around. The point that the author, Brooklyn Gibbs, makes is that the internet isn’t dead it’s just most people aren’t really experiencing it.

They go on to give fantastic advice and link to wonderful sites. 10/10. No notes.

The most common (and easiest) thing to do on the internet is complain. The range of topics varies from person to person, but one consistent grumble circles around The Algorithm and it’s incorrect assumptions about what a person might want to consume.

[…]

I am no Saint; I’ve definitely whined about my own feed more times than I can count, but after a short sulk, I usually do the obvious thing: adjust, use the search, explore a new site, or maybe even delete the app entirely if it’s no longer serving me.

What shocks me is how many people forget that option exists. I recently had a post of mine get some attention where I shared six cool sites to help expand your music library, and surprisingly, a large portion of the comments were people confessing they had forgotten how to use the internet. That broke my heart a little.

You can’t call it the “online world” if you never leave your feed. If your entire internet life happens inside TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, Reddit, or Twitter, you’re simply mall-walking, and malls are fine: predictable, climate-controlled, food courts and chain stores on every corner, but don’t mistake the mall for the city. The city is bigger, stranger, full of alleys, basements, and hidden doors. That’s the real internet, and you haven’t been there in a while.

This curriculum is designed to remind you what the internet used to be—and still is. I’ve built it to help you get your digital spark back. After this course, you won’t complain to the algorithm gods anymore, praying for a better feed. Instead, you’ll remember how to make the internet your bitch again.

Source: Offline Crush

Image: Steven Weeks