Updated '_posts/2020-10-23-streaming-to-the-masses.md' via CloudCannon
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@ -40,7 +40,7 @@ The shadiness remained while the transfer to the Internet went on, Worse: it got
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## But did the dream die though?
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Of course not\! Dreams don't die, silly. If anything adversity tends to sharpen the escapism they contain. As the corporations and governments slowly catched up with the web, huge silos emerged, capturing the social essence of it into the well known services that have come to be almost familiar. (They certainly don't need another mention here). And the information flow halted. What was once a wild jungle of cross-pollinating ideas and wildfires became a massive apparatus of advertisement and monitoring. A wall was built around the general public. To most people joining internet after 2010, it quickly felt like technical progress was merely another button in their favorite app or a better way to weed out annoying acquaintances. But beyond those walls, passionate geeks kept on building. This time with the errors of the past in mind. Not aiming for perfection, but for alternatives. The silos had to be gone and to do this, protection from it had to built-in the tools, getting inspiration from century old techniques of power-shattering: decentralization and federation. Making it impossible for a single entity to control the network had to become an integral part of the system. The [fediverse,](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fediverse){: target="_blank" rel="noopener"} the [dweb,](https://dwebx.org/){: target="_blank" rel="noopener"} [IPFS](https://ipfs.io/){: target="_blank" rel="noopener"} among others. They didn't just appear of course\! And while a majority of the public had their eyes on social media, getting addicted to dopamine, [a forum called "P2P Foundation"](https://p2pfoundation.net/){: target="_blank" rel="noopener"} was exploring new ways to approach one of the most fundamental tool of communication between humans: money.
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Of course not\! Dreams don't die, silly. If anything adversity tends to sharpen the escapism they contain. As the corporations and governments slowly catched up with the web, huge silos emerged, capturing the social essence of it into the well known services that have come to be almost familiar. (They certainly don't need another mention here). And the information flow halted. What was once a wild jungle of cross-pollinating ideas and wildfires became a massive apparatus of advertisement and monitoring. A wall was built around the general public. To most people joining internet after 2010, it quickly felt like technical progress was merely another button in their favorite app or a better way to weed out annoying acquaintances. But beyond those walls, passionate geeks kept on building. This time with the errors of the past in mind. Not aiming for perfection, but for alternatives. Getting inspiration from century old techniques of power-shattering: decentralization and federation. The silos had to be gone and to do this, protection from said silos had to be built into the tools. Making it impossible for a single entity to control the network had to become an integral part of the system. The [fediverse,](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fediverse){: target="_blank" rel="noopener"} the [dweb,](https://dwebx.org/){: target="_blank" rel="noopener"} [IPFS](https://ipfs.io/){: target="_blank" rel="noopener"} among others. They didn't just appear of course\! And while a majority of the public had their eyes on social media, getting addicted to dopamine, [a forum called "P2P Foundation"](https://p2pfoundation.net/){: target="_blank" rel="noopener"} was exploring new ways to approach one of the most fundamental tool of communication between humans: money.
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> "We can’t imagine to enter the Information Age without changing the fundamental and most used communication tool: Money"
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>
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