fbpx

What’s wrong with the internet?

Back It Up, 6X8, oil on archival canvasboard, $435.

“Consulting a website on my phone recently, I was struck by how painful it has become to use the internet. All I wanted was to read some local news and check the spread of a power cut in my area. Instead, as I scrolled, I was assailed by interruptions from integrated adverts which – in the best case – wanted eagerly to tell me about the charm and usefulness of a new BMW. In the worst case, I was urged to consult some lawyers immediately because I had been mis-sold an insurance or financial product in the past and was due an enormous payout, if only I would contact the least credible-looking advocates in the country…” (James Snell, How the Internet Turned Ugly)

I was an early and enthusiastic convert to the internet, and this blog is ancient by modern communications standards. But my distrust mounts more and more. We build this website using WordPress, which is a pretty sophisticated publishing system. We should be able to control what you see when you look at this blog. But that’s becoming more and more difficult, and we’re debating killing advertising forever. (It offsets our hosting costs, nothing more.)

Tin Foil Hat, 6X8, oil on archival canvasboard, $435 includes shipping in continental US.

If you’re a regular commenter, you may have noticed your comments swallowed up in the ether recently. My host and software are good about repelling cyberattacks, which happen periodically. Recently, however, we’ve been getting flooded with bot-comments linking to spurious websites. While they couldn’t be published until I okayed them, they were burying real comments in a sea of goop. Protecting against this kind of stuff takes time and energy away from painting.

Then there are the bogus ‘offers’ to buy my work as either NFTs or with fake cashier’s checks. I used to get two or three a year. Now I get a dozen a day. I delete them, of course, but they clog up my communications channels.

The worst offender, platform-wise, is Facebook. We used to have intelligent conversations about art and culture there. Now any real discourse is buried in promoted posts and advertising.

Stuffed animal in a bowl, with Saran Wrap. 6X8, oil on archival canvasboard, $435.

What’s wrong with the internet?

Much of the internet is now driven by ads, clickbait, and monetization schemes. All bloggers understand search-engine optimization (SEO) driven content; it’s how search engines work. But SEO also floods search engines with low-quality, repetitive results. And social media platforms prioritize engagement over accuracy and depth. That’s why all our writing tools have reading-level gauges; heaven forbid we use language that forces the reader to think.

You might imagine you’re surfing the web for stuff that interests you, but content discovery is at the mercy of computer algorithms. You see what those platforms want you to see, not what’s most valuable or relevant.

Niche blogs like this one are a dying breed. We just don’t pack enough punch to compete with centralized platforms. I have a big readership for a painting blog, but it’s a mere flyspeck compared to modern influencers. The answer for many creatives has been to go to Substack, which is a subscription-based newsletter model. That would be a departure from my original model, which, sadly, might be obsolete.

Baby Monkey Riding on a Pig, oil on archival canvasboard, $435.

Do you see this blog on a social media platform?

If so, you might want to take a moment to subscribe, at top left. I’ve spent twenty years not thinking overmuch about email as a means of dissemination, but in the current state of social media platforms, I don’t trust them to deliver fair, free content. Neither should you.

Reserve your spot now for a workshop in 2025:

2 Replies to “What’s wrong with the internet?”

  1. I have felt that email was the way to go, maybe 80% of the time. It doesn’t allow for expansion but you know you have someone how knows you and has been interested in some form or another. When folks change emails is when things get clogged up.
    With Faceplant plopping ridiculous ads every fourth post it has become the advertising behemoth of the internet. I am afraid of asking a specific question for fear of being inundated by the algorithms choice of answers for me. I do not know how to ask without that happening. Posting flowers kittens and puppies must frustrate the bejesis out of the system but who wants cute and fuzzy all the time. I find your blog relevant to most of the time but it chooses to show up either on faceplant or my email inconsistently maybe 3 xs a week. And I know I have whined about the ads on the blog, some really awful ones, and wonder if the algorithm uses them too?
    I am thinking some genius is out there working on a cleaner version of internet communication, BlueSky maybe or something else.

    Of the notion we have to ride it for as long as we can till the next Iteration comes along. That said I do get quite a few substack. I don’t subscribe with a paid follow to all of them. I would go broke. So all that blather and no answer. Sorry. D

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *