The OPEN WEB is DYING...

Subscribers:
390,000
Published on ● Video Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pjTzQJxw-20



Duration: 15:49
57,323 views
4,952


Learn about the CARTA security model and see if it applies to your organization: https://bit.ly/3wWCM3V

Grab a brand new laptop or desktop running Linux: https://www.tuxedocomputers.com/en#

👏 SUPPORT THE CHANNEL:
Get access to a weekly podcast, vote on the next topics I cover, and get your name in the credits:

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@thelinuxexp/join
Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thelinuxexperiment

Or, you can donate whatever you want: https://paypal.me/thelinuxexp

👕 GET TLE MERCH
Support the channel AND get cool new gear: https://the-linux-experiment.creator-spring.com/

🎙️ LINUX AND OPEN SOURCE NEWS PODCAST:
Listen to the latest Linux and open source news, with more in depth coverage, and ad-free! https://podcast.thelinuxexp.com

🏆 FOLLOW ME ELSEWHERE:
Website: https://thelinuxexp.com
Mastodon: https://mastodon.social/web/@thelinuxEXP
Pixelfed: https://pixelfed.social/TLENick
Twitter : http://twitter.com/thelinuxEXP
PeerTube: https://tilvids.com/c/thelinuxexperiment_channel/videos

This video is distributed under the Creative Commons Share Alike license.

#worldwideweb #internet

00:00 Intro
00:38 Sponsor: Learn about the CARTA security model for free
01:25 Big Tech Centralization
05:05 Internet Filtering
08:31 Internet Blackouts
09:44 Alternative Internets
11:22 Signs of healing
13:39 Sponsor: Get a device that runs Linux perfectly
14:32 Support the channel

The first big thing that's killing the open internet is centralization by big companies.
Big tech companies like Apple, Google, or Microsoft are making all efforts to ensure that their users stick to their online services and products, and this ends up dictating what parts of the internet you end up accessing or not.

Using a specific web browser means you're using a specific engine, which dictates what you can or can't do online. It's also the search engines from these companies that will dictate which websites surface, and which don't. The algorithms from the platforms you use, like youtube for video, Facebook, or Twitter will define what content you see, and what content you don't.

And then you have the lack of interoperability between services. But this stuff, you can still bypass yourself. More concerning is what countries do to limit what you can and can't access.

https://www.comparitech.com/blog/vpn-privacy/internet-censorship-map/

Countries implement various filters that are basically censorship. Some of it is acceptable, like blocking illegal material, and some of it is more questionable, like blocking websites that reference various copyrighted materials.

All these filters make the internet less open: you can't freely access what you're looking for if your country decides it's not allowed.

When filters aren't enough, countries now implement full internet blackouts, generally to deal with protests against the government's actions. In 2020, 268 million people had their internet access shut down, that's 49% more than in 2019.

While these blackouts are selective, and can still let governments access the internet themselves while the general public can't, they're devastating for a country's economy and business, and they can't be maintained for very long periods of time.

https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2016/10/the-global-economic-damage-of-internet-blackouts/503093/

https://news.yahoo.com/268-million-people-had-internet-122208785.html

https://www.wired.com/story/iran-internet-blackout-economy/

Now, the ultimate candidate against the open web is what China has built. They might be linked to the general internet everybody else enjoys, but it's a one way street: people can access their websites, but Chinese people can't access most of the rest of the internet, being limited to what the Chinese government allows.

China has built their own entire alternative internet, with their own services and their own websites, and it's not for nothing that we're talking about the great firewall of china, because when you're in there, you can't access anything the government has deemed "not ok".

https://priteshpawar.com/chinese-alternatives-to-popular-apps-and-websites/tech-industry-and-case-studies/priteshpawar/
that it would be a grave mistake to let their citizens have access to information sources that

Of course, it's not all doom and gloom. The internet is showing signs of healing, at least on certain fronts.

First, decentralized services are emerging again, slowly offering alternatives to the big closed down networks. Mastodon for example is a success story of a federated, decentralized network offering a viable alternative to Twitter, and that can talk to a variety of other services, like Pixelfed, Wordpress, Peerube, Castopod, and the like.

Various laws are also being passed, forcing big tech companies to relinquish a bit of control, over their platforms or app stores, for example, with Apple being forced in the EU to have iMessage be interoperable, and allowing 3rd party app stores on iOS.




Other Videos By The Linux Experiment


2023-03-08How Linux killed Unix: the UNIX Wars
2023-03-05HP gives up, Flathub payments, companies using FOSS wrong: Linux & Open Source News
2023-03-01Twitter 2.0 is a NIGHTMARE: the "Everything App" problem
2023-02-25Ubuntu vs flatpak, Microsoft's anti-consumer features, GNOME 44 beta: Linux & Open Source News
2023-02-23The most POWERFUL Linux laptop? Tuxedo Stellaris 17 Gen 4 Review
2023-02-21LINUX vs WINDOWS: complete performance test!
2023-02-18FOSS funding is broken, Thunderbird's redesign, KDE Plasma 5.27 - Linux & Open Source News
2023-02-1616 of the BEST NextCloud apps to replace Google and Apple services
2023-02-14KDE PLASMA 5.27: the biggest, best KDE release yet!
2023-02-12Windows is spyware, Fedora adds Flathub, AI tool violates FOSS: Linux & Open Source News
2023-02-09The OPEN WEB is DYING...
2023-02-07You NEED A NAS! Easy, private home cloud, or Google / Office 365 replacement!
2023-02-04PopOS/Cosmic updates, Mint & XFCE + Wayland, elementary OS 7: Linux and Open Source News
2023-02-02Replace Google Drive, OneDrive or iCloud with these better alternatives!
2023-01-31elementary OS 7: is it enough for me to switch back?
2023-01-28New EU law might hurt FOSS, Google fires FOSS teams, GNOME 44 alpha: Linux and Open Source news
2023-01-25How to use MASTODON: the COMPLETE GUIDE (join, use, find people to follow, etiquette...)
2023-01-21KDE 5.27 beta, AI lawsuits and Linux Metaverse: Linux and Open Source News
2023-01-185 NEXTCLOUD UPDATES that will make you ditch Google & Apple
2023-01-14Apple spies on users, Mastodon loses users, Mozilla ♥️ Fediverse: Linux & Open Source News
2023-01-12THIS is why I'm LEAVING ANDROID



Tags:
linux
distribution
linux distro
linux help
linux tutorial
linux 2022
opensource
linux tips
distro
open internet is dying
death of internet
why the internet is dying
the open web is in danger
threats to the open web
online censorship
censorship
freedom of speech
free speech
free speech internet decency and censorship
internet free speech do you know your rights
should everyone receive free internet speech
the internet should be free for everyone speech



Other Statistics

Counter-Strike: Source Statistics For The Linux Experiment

At present, The Linux Experiment has 5,612,422 views spread across 58 videos for Counter-Strike: Source, and about 7 hours worth of Counter-Strike: Source videos were uploaded to his channel. This makes up 4.59% of the content that The Linux Experiment has uploaded to YouTube.