Welcome to the latest in my series of rants about the online community.
This time, I'm focusing on YouTube and the community that has quickly sprug up around it. First, I'd like to say that I like YouTube. Why shouldn't I? It's neat, trendy, and gives easy access to information that was hard to find before. We haven't seen an information revolution like this since effective search engines sprouted some ten years ago. It's good for comedy, politics, and creative theatre. It's like the Internet was for text and games a decade ago.
For those of you unfamiliar with what Internet life was like ten years ago, I'll elaborate a bit so you know what I'm talking about. It was the "golden age" of Internet gaming and web surfing. You could surf for hours reading about Toby the Gardner's pet cat and what its favorite food was, all thanks to 28.8Kbps modems, Internet Explorer 3, and web sites made from templates in Publisher. Games were similar. In May of 1996, Quake was released and the online gaming community exploded. It was a competitive environment where people had fun blowing the crap out of others and getting the crap blown out of them. Creativity soared with Quake Movies and the like. PlanetQuake (I guess it's GameSpy, er, IGN now) was just getting started. Telefragged was a big rival. All of the Quake related websites they hosted were listed in a column on the side. It was the beginning of an age and all was good.
So, what does that have to do with YouTube? Well, it's the general trend with anything Internet related these days. Something new, fresh, and exciting comes along and it's wonderful. At least it is for a while. The problem is that malicious, dumb, or otherwise undesirable people seem to be attracted to the same things the rest of us enjoy. What starts out as neat an innovative will eventually go stagnant and turn into nothing more than a collection of a bunch of idiots arguing over meaningless topics and engaging in otherwise unattractive behaviors. The Internet of fifteen years ago first started to see this problem when more than intellectuals started to get access to the "information super highway". YouTube is starting to feel this trend already.
What started as a neat repository of videos for all to enjoy has transformed. We are seeing the infiltration of spambots, trolls, and people who steal other individuals' successful videos and repost them in order to boost their notoriety. Honor is quickly vanishing. Intelligent comments are vanishing. In come the hoard of "me too"s, assholes, and everyone else that always seems to ruin anything good on the Internet. When will the people who made it cool in the first place start to leave? It's already begun. Those who used to enhance the community seem to frequently be going dormant--no longer participating; just watching.
Now, I'm not saying that YouTube is dying or that everybody who posts enjoyable material has gone. I am saying, however, that YouTube is changing...and not for the better.
Enjoy the atmosphere while it lasts, because it's evaporating a little more all the time.