this post was submitted on 12 Mar 2025
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In retrospect, the "information age" should be renamed to the "disinformation age."
I think it just was all too fast and we got overtaken by the amount we suddenly had access to. And while extremists have no issue walking over corpses to use this new stuff for their causes and can therefore act much quicker and more decisive than the more reasonable parts of society who still have/want to care about their weakest links and have to be much more careful.
Also, it has shown that at least my German goverment hates progress and everything that would actually needs them to be decisive and get out of their comfort zone in any way, shape or form.
I'm not sure speed was the issue, except possibly in terms of Free Software development struggling to keep parity with proprietary software development.
I think the major problem was lax antitrust and consumer protection laws, and/or failure to enforce them, especially by old and computer-illiterate legislators. Perhaps even worse, when they did try to get informed, the "experts" they decided to listen to tended to be exploitative tech bros instead of academics and others with more egalitarian/altruistic points of view.
Some of the policies we should have adopted, but didn't:
Your points do make sense for a layman like me but I have honestly never thought this much about it.