• Qukatt (edited 8 years ago)
    +2

    it's a good Brit/yiddish word :) I like that and Schlep ("i have to schlep over to the shops" as in a journey that's unwanted and tedious xD)

    Yeah i dunno who the fault falls on, it's part of the process of feeling out these new rules for online cultures. Keeping in mind that the majority of the population still remembers a time when being on the internet meant no-one could use the phone and when the internet came on AOL CDs.

    Edit: It's like when people discovered snapchats weren't as private and ephemeral as everyone thought they were. Hilarious

  • Saffire
    +2
    @Qukatt -

    Hmm, I do like Schlep as well but where I'm from we just say "I have to drag my ass over to the shops" which I think I prefer :D

    Fleshing out online rules and regulations is definitely a process, albeit one that I think needs to be started on and completed ASAP before some serious and irreversible damage is done to a lot of innocent and people that are ignorant to the implications that the new tech culture is bringing with it. It's actually kind of shameful IMO that we haven't figured this out yet and put a plan into action that would at least get us started on it.

    And I think it's good that a majority of people were present for and remember the birth of the Internet. It makes us more informed on the matter (Or at least its history) and will hopefully allow us to make more informed decisions about it.

  • Qukatt (edited 8 years ago)
    +3
    @Saffire -

    ah see i think the opposite given some of the bizarre legislation people are coming up with especially with regards to RIAA's war on piracy and the WikiLeaks kerfuffle. It's obvious to me that the people trying to regulate the internet and make these laws have absolutely no idea what is going on.

    the whole thing to ban or otherwise negate encryption practises when it comes to the police or government is laughable and scary at the same time.

    Coupled with the recent news story about that kid who was prosecuted and is a registered sex offender for having a picture of himself naked as a minor I am not at all confident in the current generation's ability to sensibly hash out the laws we need. It['s not shameful really though; tech moves so quickly! In just 15 years I've moved from a nokia 3210, with snake as it's game, ringtones I had to text a number off the tv to get or figure out and program myself, 2 or 3 lines of text and 140 characters per text message to a Lumia 920 which i can play the friggan Sims on, remote into my desktop and control (we can play ff14 this way, it's insane), i can browse the net, chat for free, take better pictures on it than i could on any camera i had previously owned. My ringtone doesn't even matter because everyone skypes me on my phone, i have my email there, I can use all of that stuff in the middle of nowhere (except my dad's ffs)

    I didn't get a phone til i was 14, these days parents send their 7 year olds out with a phone just in case of emergency. Hell you can get phones now that only call 4 preset numbers and have no screens or anything especially designed for younger children in daycare (or to torture your teenager LMAO).

    The main issue with us remembering the birth of the internet is "golden age" thinking where you tend to remember the old days as being somehow better and simpler. Wasn't life better and simpler when you had rotary dial phones? not really. I wouldn't trade my smart phone and fibre optic cables and my tablet for anything.

    ...

    Jeezo we've gone so far off topic xD great discussing this with you though :D

    Edit: Hell we can't even convince the government that the Internet should be a utility and not a luxury

    • Saffire
      +1
      @Qukatt -

      Thank you as well for a very enjoyable discussion :)