Everyone On the Web Will Die. What About Their Data?- The internet is aging. As soon as the 2060s, there may be more dead than alive users on Facebook.
Time|August 26, 2024
The internet is aging. As soon as the 2060s, there may be more dead than alive users on Facebook. We know that everyone using the internet will die, and that hundreds of millions, if not billions, will do so in the next three decades. We know this poses a serious threat to an economy based on targeted ads (the dead don't click on them). We also know that whoever seizes control over dead-user data will wield enormous power over our future access to the past. Just consider that one person –Elon Musk, no less– now owns the entirety of the tweets that constitute(d) the Arab Spring, #MeToo, and Black Lives Matter. When future historians seek to understand their past, it is the Musks and Mark Zuckerbergs of the world who will set the terms.
By Carl Ohman
Everyone On the Web Will Die. What About Their Data?- The internet is aging. As soon as the 2060s, there may be more dead than alive users on Facebook.

The internet is aging. As soon as the 2060s, there may be more dead than alive users on Facebook. Many of the platforms that are now part of society's basic infrastructure face a similar prospect. What happens when they –and their users– die will be a critical battleground for the internet's future. We have done virtually zero preparation for it.

Back in 1997, when John Perry Barlow published his now legendary "A Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace," he boldly stated that the governments of the world –the "giants of flesh and steel," as he called them– had no dominion over cyberspace. The internet was a "new home of Mind" beyond the flesh, where its young and tech-savvy citizens would never age or decay. We still tend to see the internet that way. We also tend to think of it as something that has largely to do with youth. In short, we see cyberspace as a space without time.

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