It’s this extreme enshittification that made me sail the high seas again
It’s not that I want to
It’s not that I don’t want to pay
It’s not that the seas are cheap
It’s not that the seas are easy
It’s hard, it’s expensive (storage is cheap until you need to store boat loads of 20-40GB files, it takes huge amounts of time and has become a hobby because that’s what it takes.
I would gladly pay a single provider 100/month for all my series, movies, music, etc and always have access to everything everywhere without ads but the providers literally fucked us over on each and every one of those items so I’m done.
Aarrrr mateys, all aboard!
No chance @ 100/month. At that money, I want my dick sucked as well. Netflix used to be just 5.99 a month. I let it run for months even when I wasnt watching it because, fuck it. Its only 5 bucks. Not its what, 20? Fuck that. And thats before you get to all the other shit.
I spent 300 on a 22gb HDD and havent looked back. Sonarr downloads whatever tv shows Im watching, and I play it through plex or infuse. Both of which I paid the 100 for the lifetime sub. Other than that, I pay for internet and power. I also pay 45 a year for an iptv sub. Im in the UK, so thats 45 for the year to watch football that would cost me 50 per month to watch legally, and I still wouldnt get to see every game.
All of these greedy cunts have created this world of the high seas. But in order to get people away from it, it would have to nowhere near 100 a month. Theres no way Im chipping in for some fat CEOs fucking boat, just to watch tv. They can charge a fair rate, or they can fuck off.
I have some 100TB available right now and built a bit of a personal collection as a hobby, finding obscure.movies and shows nobody has heard of world wide, American, Canadian, Mexican, Danish, German, Japanese, etc.
It gets costly quickly, and takes huge swaths of time but it’s awesome having such a broad cluster of media available, this is what a Netflix type provider should have.
The 100/month is just to say that money never was an issue, I just want to have access to any media that I want instead of the bullshit we have now where providers must fuck around with their users to get the maximum amount of revenue
I spent 300 on a 22gb HDD and havent looked back.
I hope that was a typo. If not you got ripped off. And depending on what your sonars finds you’re going to run out of storage fast.
Maybe they bought it back in 2002?
Even in 2002 that would be a massive ripoff. In 2002 youd probably pay about 20/25 quid for a 20gb hdd. And even then, that would be high as I remember grabbing a 40 for not much more.
Not a typo, a total brain fart lol
As for Sonarr, its hooked up to my private tracker and has strict rules about what it downloads.
“THE ONE PIECE… THE ONE PIECE IS REAL!”
Unlock Origin for browsers (mobile and desktop)
NextDNS or PiHole (for everything)
FOSS apps for ad free apps that do exactly what the ad-full and premium apps do but free
And minimize usage of software that sells your data wherever possible
Everyone needs to be doing these things. Corporations gaslight folks into thinking they need ads and your info to upkeep and improve their services, but it isn’t true. They pocket the revenue while making their products shittier and shittier.
Don’t support shitty buisinesses
Strange to read your comment then notice that you are writing that from Cloudflare’s centralised walled garden. Not supporting corporate technofeudal shitholes entails staying outside of Cloudflare.
Normally i don’t read a wall of text in post images, but damn. Every sentence is true.
Yeah the wall of text is the medium for this art piece and it’s very effective.
It really matches the exhaustion of dealing with tech in 2025.
it’s not “tech”, it’s capitalism. tech works fine. you can see this with linux and fediverse and such. it’s companies making everything into a subscription service that sucks.
Preach
Same. I am having PTSD flashbacks
Made me angrier than it should have.
Because it’s SO damn true…
If I wasn’t in IT and knew how to run my own servers I would probably have given up on technology by now
you are exactly as angry as you should.
We’re updating our Terms of Service. Read on to discover how our legal department plans to screw you over in the future.
You agree to arbitration.
You agree to data collection.
You agree to letting our partners, and non-partners and 3rd parties to reuse your data.
“This feature only exists for Apple”
my Linux, windows, and Apple-having ass: okay

Original from xkcd
I wonder how much more they need to do before more people start using tools like uBlock and such. The internet is practically unusable without it, and I’m not using hyperbole–most websites have so much garbage on them that you literally can’t read them without an ad blocker and/or reading mode.
Since Google removed support for ad blockers, I convinced my wife to switch to Firefox. She noticed a huge improvement immediately, especially on mobile.
I went as far as installing network level ad blocking on both my home network as well as devices.
Recently, I’ve had a few friends over whom are… not as technologically adept. They were incredibly surprised that after joining my guest WiFi, suddenly they were able to browse most websites almost completely unobstructed. No ads, no popups, no BS. Aside from the usual cookie agreements, of course.
If you can, help your friends, install ad blockers for them, make their internet experience better. Even DNS level adblocking is relatively easy to set up, and the only thing this hurts is the unscrupulous megacorporations that want to milk you for every single bit of personal information to sell.
The reason I haven’t installed DNS level blocks is I’m always worried they will break random content and it’ll be harder to debug. Have you experienced that?
Look at piHole to get started. It runs on a raspberry pi and acts as your dns server. It blocks so much garbage. You add and remove sites on whitelist and blacklist, use 3rd party block lists. If you think dns is causing an issue, switch to a public dns temporarily is easy. And its free.
I thought piHole blocked Cloudflare, but then I see you are using Cloudflare (lemmy.world). Did you configure it to not block Cloudflare?
It doesnt block cloudflare by default. I use it and havent had to touch pihole to do it.
A few, mostly for my mother who wanted those email ads where she got points or whatever for clicking on them.
On the pihole, I just disable it for 5 minutes (there’s a button) and then see if it works. If it does. Then I look at the logs for what it blocks on a load. If not, it wasn’t the DNA blocker.
It’s not terribly difficult if you’re the one who set up the pihole or equivalent. But I typically use adblockers on end devices because they’re easier for other people to use (toggling a browser extension is accessible to most people, especially if I pin it to the menu bar).
I’ve only had network level ad blocking break online retail sites. Not every one but especially the ones that load separate frames for the CC processor on the check out screen. Blocking trackers breaks clicking on ads in email and search results though which a surprising number of guests have complained about.
Also be aware, DNS is pretty vital for using the Internet, if the thing hosting your DNS goes down, your Internet and any internal name based routing goes down too unless you know how to circumvent it.
Make sure the pihole doesn’t get unplugged basically.
Your router software probably accepts multiple DNS entries so you can have backups if your pi goes down.
My friend hates it, because it breaks some sites and services. Everytime he’s here he says “oh, right… you got that blocker thing on the network”, because he hit a snag once again.
I’m not sure what he does or how he uses the internet, but I don’t even notice that it’s there.
Pihole is your friend.
Pihole is great, except my wife can’t turn it off if it breaks something (at least not without Extra work to set it up on my end). And when she leaves our wifi, she’s stuck with ads again.
That’s why I typically recommend end-device adblockers. Easier for most users to use and configure.
I get it. I had complaints from someone in my house too because they wanted the ads. I tried to explain that it was more than just ads but they didn’t care. I whitelisted their devices and let it go. There are also some connected devices that need to phone home in order to operate. These get reluctantly whitelisted too.
I don’t experience all of what OP is talking about because I use a VPN, ad block, sponsor block and use masked emails for almost all my signups.
Doesn’t fix everything but certainly helps make living in today’s digital exp system less horrific.
I think the point is that you have to do all of that in order to use the internet at all. And even then, it’s still a lot worse than it was even 5 years ago.
For sure, more and more I want to just unplug entirely and say fuck it. Like the digital version of being a hermit in the woods.
There are people who are building and participating in alternatives. They deserve support. But people have also become accustomed to getting a lot for free.
Now I’m not defending YouTube, but they have to store billions of hours of videos and serve millions of people at a time, just so you (and me) can stream 10hrs of video a day just to listen to lo fi study music or watch let’s plays. that’s very expensive. The whole model is ass-backwards, that content creators exist to get paid. YouTube should be charging content creators for storing their videos, and if the creator wants to saturate their shit with ads and e-begging, then it be their choice.
The free/cheap entitlement definitely seeps into FOSS areas. I periodically see things like “this app/platform NEEDS to have all of the functionality of the paid one, be free and easy to set up” or particularly contradictory “a Linux phone NEEDS to have reliable calls, texts, support my banking apps, WhatsApp, have modern hardware, and cost $200”
(or variations thereof)
I like the idea of free software, but users shouldn’t expect people to do the work for them for free. If there’s software I need that’s free, great. If there’s no free version, I’m not owed one and I’m not gonna complain until I get one.
Complaining is part of contributing ideas. You can contribute code, or ideas, or both. Have a look at !foss_requests@libretechni.ca.
One good principle that’s aligned with what you’re saying is that every FOSS contributor desides for themself what work to do. It’s uncivil to try to task someone in partcular with work. No one should be personally pushed to do work. Avoid that, and there is nothing wrong with reporting bugs and making suggestions generally to the commons.
You’re right, but this benefits rich content creators at the cost of new ones creating more income inequality in the content creation business.
I FUCKING HATE HAVING TO DELETE MY ACCOUNT BY SENDING EMAILS IN A LENGTHY AND UNNECESSARY SUPPORT TICKET EMAIL CHAIN
give me a button. give. me. a. delete. acount. button. I am asking this not of the corporations, but of the government. Right to be forgotten should mandate making it convenient. When I want to delete my account I click Delete Account and recieve a confirmation email. I click the link in the email. My account gets deleted right then and there.
Youtube shorts / short form content has driven me so mad that I’ve now deleted all social media, with only voyager to access lemmy. I actually couldn’t handle how shit it all is, which I kept going back to like a drug
There’s browser extensions/addons to block YouTube shorts. Combine it with SponsorBlock, DeArrow and a decent adblocker and YouTube becomes somewhat useable. The only thing you still notice is content creators wasting time and beating around the bush so they can abuse your watch time for ad money and better watch statistics.
It’s the wild west all over again until they establish law and order in the tech world. No standards, just everyone trying to make their millions (billions nowadays?). I can’ help but think the end result of all this is an empty husk of a planet, floating dead through space because people wanted to collect money tokens of various values and denominations.
Yeah capital is basically free to inject unwanted messages as often and as long as they want.
It’s time theft, indoctrination, intrusion, invasion, mind control, etc.
I really don’t understand people who feel some “moral” obligation to cooperate.
Embrace free software and piracy. No account needed. No ads. No spam.
Google has mostly killed off the piracy option. Any Invidious instance that gets traction gets cut off by Google.
The FOSS option is newpipe, but if you use that over Tor (for privacy from Google), Google blocks connections.
yt-dl still works fine. Download, re-host.
Not over Tor. It has the same problem as newpipe over tor.
We need a more advanced tool, like this:
@CurlyWurlies4All Relevant essay from Ed Zitron. It’s well-worth a read, for those who haven’t already.
https://www.wheresyoured.at/never-forgive-them/
The picture I am trying to paint is one of terror and abuse. The average person’s experience of using a computer starts with aggressive interference delivered in a shoddy, sludge-like frame, and as the wider internet opens up to said user, already battered by a horrible user experience, they’re immediately thrown into heavily-algorithmic feeds each built to con them, feeding whatever holds their attention and chucking ads in as best they can. As they browse the web, websites like NBCnews.com feature stories from companies like “WorldTrending.com” with advertisements for bizarre toys written in the style of a blog, so intentional in their deceit that the page in question has a huge disclaimer at the bottom saying it’s an ad.
While far from concise, this article is one of the best summaries of the state of modern technology I’ve read in a long time. I’ve followed some of his analysis of the AI market and generally he’s got a good understanding of what’s at play. It’s amusing (and somewhat depressing) to consider how much I’ve internalized the current state of affairs as “normal” and have developed my own methods for compensating or navigating around the toxicity of commercial tech. Read this and then his “Rot Economy” article. I hadn’t read this before, thanks to @Chamomile for posting.
Using the computer in the modern age is so inherently hostile that it pushes us towards corporate authoritarians like Apple, Microsoft, Google and Meta — and now that every single website is so desperate for our email and to show us as many ads as possible, it’s either harmful or difficult for the average person to exist online.
I’m reading Cory Doctorow’s latest book, Enshittification. As Ed Zitron said, never forgive them for what they did to the internet…
Listened to it on a long drive. I knew all of the big players were sketchy, but did not expect the degree to which they are. Google “brand-matching” searches (adding invisible brand names to search queries) to direct people to brands’ sites and then charging those same brands for “more traffic” is just cartoon villain level shit.
Youtube is not full of ads.
This comment was brought to you by Invidious gang.
No ads on my side, either.
This comment was brought to you by the uBlock Origin gang.
Team Kodi checking in. Also on team ad blockers.
Team PiHole, unlock and Privacy Badger here. What’s an ad?
Revanced user here, and I don’t have the faintest clue either.
When Google started its attack on Invidious, I was forced to try direct YT access. The ads were so frequent and intrusive that I had to walk. It’s intolerable.
no ads on my side either.
greetings from the
~/.bin/ytgang.use like
yt fHYNyCi2lnAwhere fHYNyCi2lnA is the youtube video id.#!/usr/bin/bash # usage example: yt fHYNyCi2lnA if [ "$1" = "" ]; then echo "Usage examples:" echo " yt fHYNyCi2lnA" echo " yt https://inv.nadeko.net/watch?v=a1oxZ6RtpPk" exit fi ADDRESS="$1" # change https://inv.nadeko.net/watch?v=a1oxZ6RtpPk to a1oxZ6RtpPk if [[ "$ADDRESS" == *"watch"* ]]; then arr=(${ADDRESS//'v='/ }) ADDRESS="${arr[1]}" fi echo video id: "$ADDRESS" mpv "https://youtube.com/watch?v=%24ADDRESS"
You know, if ads actually worked, I wouldn’t mind them. We have AAAAALL this tech to try to find the exact thing I might want to buy, and they still can’t do it. If the ads in my feed were 100% things I would buy, I wouldn’t actually mind them because it’s things I like and either have bought or would want to buy. Instead, I hate ads because it’s all things I don’t and never would buy!
When I was growing up watching Cartoon Network, obviously there were ads, and those ads actually were suited to me, because I was a child watching children’s programming. When they advertised a toy, I saw it and I thought “Ooh I want that!”; I didn’t always get it, but I definitely wanted it. That was in the late 90s, with 1000x less information on me personally than they have now.
The purpose of advertising isn’t always to sell you something you need or want. A lot of the time, it’s to build a desire for something you don’t. This is why it comes off as invasive and uncanny: it’s all that unsolicited, undsesired content that gets you.
Advertising exists because there’s a demand for it from businesses. There’s never going to be a 1:1 match of advertisements to customers. It’s its own market, and, often, as a consumer, you will be served ads that don’t make sense to you because someone is making money.
Ads do work. We have this whole surveillance dystopia to track how people behave online and the data shows that it is profitable to show them ads. All those eCommerce companies know how many sales they got via ads and yes, that’s profitable. It is the reason why there are so many ads.
Ads do work. When I mention ad blockers people who dont use them say “The ads in my feed are things I would buy”. I dont care if the ads are exactly what I want to buy, I dont think they pay the site enough to warrent wasting my time and ruining the experience of what im actually trying to interact with. 50s ad on youtube isnt even paying out a cent. Thats stupid.















