
Huh? Something feels off~~~~ here it comes…
It was a lawless area, so various regulations were put in place, and now we are in this situation; things can improve, but they can’t get worse, right?
Don’t start threads that are unlikely to gain agreement from the premises.
It is said that the internet was more peaceful in the past.Huh?
I won’t say that the past was peaceful, but…
I believe things have gone completely haywire since the Yutori generation started to act out.
>>3When I see things like that, even old people are acting out, so it has nothing to do with the relaxed generation.
When was a long time ago?
No, it was definitely more peaceful in the past when only those who had a computer at home could go online.
Now that everyone can connect to the internet on smartphones, the number of strange people has increased dramatically.
Regardless of the pinpoint ratio, the total population increase has led to an increase in harm on the internet.
In the past, there was a lot of mocking towards the Yutori generation.
You hardly see any Gen Z baiting, do you?
>>8An old man who cannot recognize a provocation as a provocation…
Even if there are mountains of examples in front of us, not learning is something common across all generations, and it might be that as technology has become more widespread and the number of users has increased, it has become more noticeable.
It feels like the lid of hell has opened with the spread of smartphones.
If I may say so, the past without del or ID was much more lawless.
In the old days of the internet, you would get scolded for not using honorific language.
In the old days of the internet, if you wrote in half-width kana, the administrator would come to your house.
It might have been more peaceful without Twitter.
I think it was also a turning point when it became a place where money could be earned.
But it used to be really loud with “die, die,” but now it’s not so much, so things have calmed down.
Seriously, “die” was the greeting.
>>17I feel like they’re just increasing the variations of insults and avoiding the banned words.
The current situation, with the increase in the number of idiots, is worse.
When was the past?
The situations are different 30 years ago, 20 years ago, and 10 years ago, but…
I wonder when it was that we stopped calling the commotion on the internet a festival.
Before I knew it, reality and the internet started to connect, and everything became strange.
It took half a day, a whole day, or even several days for a single round of conversation.
It’s so peaceful that neither side even wants to go to war.
It’s true that things were worse back then, but there wasn’t much friction itself.
Such an era.
It was once the hideout of scum.
After a while, those idiots started to misunderstand that they could change our world and began to interfere with the outside.
In addition to the trash, a large influx of regular people has led to this situation.
>>25I thought this itself was being mocked and wasn’t a big deal.
In that context, it might be true that there are those who come closer sensing the smell of money.
The knowledge and economic power to buy a computer and connect to the internet served as a filter in itself.
>>26Smartphones are easy for anyone to use.
You can engage in argument battles, defamation, cybercrime, and solicitation for dark part-time jobs, you know.
Being unemployed or a NEET was once a convenient excuse.
I was thinking that if I took this convenience seriously, an actual unemployed person would show up, and then one really did.
Of course.
>>28If I had to say in terms of proportion, I have the impression that there were more unemployed people in the past.
>>29It was fine even if I was relatively unemployed or a NEET, and it’s still fine now.
The problem is that it’s starting to get tangled up in the state of whether it’s present or not, or in a strange competition for dominance, which is what I dislike.
As a result of anyone being able to access the internet, the divide between online and reality has disappeared, and all the shitty things in reality have simply been brought online.
The fact that the internet has become a place for showing off one’s ego due to social media is significant.
The term “netiquette” has become rarely heard these days.
The old internet was something you couldn’t use without a certain level of knowledge…
About 20 years ago, the community was different.
Age, gender, and interests were categorized separately.
This place was also a community of otaku and adult men, so it was relatively peaceful.
The number of sick people who are not metaphors has increased.
The 2000s were a lawless zone, but those kinds of people were confined to certain places.
Since the 2010s, criminal-like behavior has decreased, but overall morality has plummeted.
Neither of them is any good.
Patients have become more likely to come to the surface.
Since the homo rape situation has emerged, it has worsened rapidly.
That guy was inciting a mob lynching as a way to gain traffic.