home.social

#savetheweb — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #savetheweb, aggregated by home.social.

  1. The internet is turning into a landfill of AI-generated "slop"—and if we’re not careful, we’ll all be forced to abandon our screens and touch grass (the horror! 🌱😱).
    But jokes aside, this is a real issue. AI spam is making the web harder to navigate, and it’s only getting worse.

    youtu.be/vrTrOCQZoQE #AI #WebSpam #SaveTheWeb

  2. The internet is turning into a landfill of AI-generated "slop"—and if we’re not careful, we’ll all be forced to abandon our screens and touch grass (the horror! 🌱😱).
    But jokes aside, this is a real issue. AI spam is making the web harder to navigate, and it’s only getting worse.

    youtu.be/vrTrOCQZoQE #AI #WebSpam #SaveTheWeb

  3. The internet is turning into a landfill of AI-generated "slop"—and if we’re not careful, we’ll all be forced to abandon our screens and touch grass (the horror! 🌱😱).
    But jokes aside, this is a real issue. AI spam is making the web harder to navigate, and it’s only getting worse.

    youtu.be/vrTrOCQZoQE #AI #WebSpam #SaveTheWeb

  4. The internet is turning into a landfill of AI-generated "slop"—and if we’re not careful, we’ll all be forced to abandon our screens and touch grass (the horror! 🌱😱).
    But jokes aside, this is a real issue. AI spam is making the web harder to navigate, and it’s only getting worse.

    youtu.be/vrTrOCQZoQE #AI #WebSpam #SaveTheWeb

  5. The internet is turning into a landfill of AI-generated "slop"—and if we’re not careful, we’ll all be forced to abandon our screens and touch grass (the horror! 🌱😱).
    But jokes aside, this is a real issue. AI spam is making the web harder to navigate, and it’s only getting worse.

    youtu.be/vrTrOCQZoQE #AI #WebSpam #SaveTheWeb

  6. Check out Aunt Teefa's team fundraising page for the Internet Archive! Help her raise $1,000 for the Internet Archive.

    In a time where preserving the history of our times is so important, the Wayback Machine has been instrumental in fighting fascism.

    donate.archive.org/team/780785

    #InternetArchive #WaybackMachine #DigitalPreservation #WebArchiving #ArchiveHistory #WebHistory #InternetHistory #SaveTheWeb #DigitalMemory #OnlineHistory #WebPreservation #ArchivingTheWeb

  7. Old articles and blog posts too often get removed from the web or neglected, left to rot on broken pages. Replanting lets you migrate legacy content to your current site so it can thrive again. Here's how I'm doing it... cybercultural.com/p/replanting/ #replanting #savetheweb

    Replanting Articles: Bring Leg...

  8. Old articles and blog posts too often get removed from the web or neglected, left to rot on broken pages. Replanting lets you migrate legacy content to your current site so it can thrive again. Here's how I'm doing it... cybercultural.com/p/replanting/ #replanting #savetheweb

  9. ⚡️Linkwarden: The Self-Hosted Bookmark Manager That Solved a Problem I Didn’t Know I Had

    Thank you, Linux Unplugged and Jupiter Broadcasting @ironicbadger, for introducing me to Linkwarden—a FOSS gem that will change how I save, share, and preserve the web.

    Like many of you, I’ve been using browser bookmarks for years. I’d save articles, tutorials, and interesting links, only to find them gone when I finally got around to reading them. Link rot is real, and it’s frustrating. But until I heard about Linkwarden linkwarden.app/ on Linux Unplugged jupiterbroadcasting.com/, I didn’t realize how much I needed a better solution.

    I used to think, “Browser bookmarks are fine,” and honestly, backing them up manually from time to time isn’t a real trouble—just a slight inconvenience. My problem is that I experience massive link rot when looking into two-year-old links, often with interesting subjects on small sites—they are often just gone when I want to recall them. The problem is that saving the link isn’t saving any of the information.

    But Linkwarden @linkwarden isn’t just another bookmark manager—it’s a preservation powerhouse, a collaborative hub, and a self-hosted dream. And thanks to the folks at Jupiter Broadcasting, I now understand why it’s a game-changer.

    I haven’t started hosting it yet, but I definitely will, and I hope some of you out there will find it useful too.
    Thanks to @daniel31x13 for making a awesome tool :heart_cyber: ⚡️.
    ---
    • Linkwarden github.com/linkwarden/linkwarden —  Self-hosted collaborative bookmark manager to collect, read, annotate, and fully preserve what matters, all in one place.
    • Announcing Linkwarden 2.11 blog.linkwarden.app/releases/2.11
    • Linkwarden Browser Extension github.com/linkwarden/browser-extension

    @[email protected] @selfhosting @[email protected] @selfhost #OpenSourceSoftware #TechForGood #Linkwarden #SelfHosted #FOSS #OpenSource #WebPreservation #Fediverse #LinuxUnplugged #SaveTheWeb #NoMore404 #TechCommunity #DigitalArchiving #LinkRot #PrivacyFirst #BookmarkManager #Bookmark

  10. ⚡️Linkwarden: The Self-Hosted Bookmark Manager That Solved a Problem I Didn’t Know I Had

    Thank you, Linux Unplugged and Jupiter Broadcasting @ironicbadger, for introducing me to Linkwarden—a FOSS gem that will change how I save, share, and preserve the web.

    Like many of you, I’ve been using browser bookmarks for years. I’d save articles, tutorials, and interesting links, only to find them gone when I finally got around to reading them. Link rot is real, and it’s frustrating. But until I heard about Linkwarden linkwarden.app/ on Linux Unplugged jupiterbroadcasting.com/, I didn’t realize how much I needed a better solution.

    I used to think, “Browser bookmarks are fine,” and honestly, backing them up manually from time to time isn’t a real trouble—just a slight inconvenience. My problem is that I experience massive link rot when looking into two-year-old links, often with interesting subjects on small sites—they are often just gone when I want to recall them. The problem is that saving the link isn’t saving any of the information.

    But Linkwarden @linkwarden isn’t just another bookmark manager—it’s a preservation powerhouse, a collaborative hub, and a self-hosted dream. And thanks to the folks at Jupiter Broadcasting, I now understand why it’s a game-changer.

    I haven’t started hosting it yet, but I definitely will, and I hope some of you out there will find it useful too.
    Thanks to @daniel31x13 for making a awesome tool :heart_cyber: ⚡️.
    ---
    • Linkwarden github.com/linkwarden/linkwarden —  Self-hosted collaborative bookmark manager to collect, read, annotate, and fully preserve what matters, all in one place.
    • Announcing Linkwarden 2.11 blog.linkwarden.app/releases/2.11
    • Linkwarden Browser Extension github.com/linkwarden/browser-extension

    @[email protected] @selfhosting @[email protected] @selfhost #OpenSourceSoftware #TechForGood #Linkwarden #SelfHosted #FOSS #OpenSource #WebPreservation #Fediverse #LinuxUnplugged #SaveTheWeb #NoMore404 #TechCommunity #DigitalArchiving #LinkRot #PrivacyFirst #BookmarkManager #Bookmark

  11. ⚡️Linkwarden: The Self-Hosted Bookmark Manager That Solved a Problem I Didn’t Know I Had

    Thank you, Linux Unplugged and Jupiter Broadcasting @ironicbadger, for introducing me to Linkwarden—a FOSS gem that will change how I save, share, and preserve the web.

    Like many of you, I’ve been using browser bookmarks for years. I’d save articles, tutorials, and interesting links, only to find them gone when I finally got around to reading them. Link rot is real, and it’s frustrating. But until I heard about Linkwarden linkwarden.app/ on Linux Unplugged jupiterbroadcasting.com/, I didn’t realize how much I needed a better solution.

    I used to think, “Browser bookmarks are fine,” and honestly, backing them up manually from time to time isn’t a real trouble—just a slight inconvenience. My problem is that I experience massive link rot when looking into two-year-old links, often with interesting subjects on small sites—they are often just gone when I want to recall them. The problem is that saving the link isn’t saving any of the information.

    But Linkwarden @linkwarden isn’t just another bookmark manager—it’s a preservation powerhouse, a collaborative hub, and a self-hosted dream. And thanks to the folks at Jupiter Broadcasting, I now understand why it’s a game-changer.

    I haven’t started hosting it yet, but I definitely will, and I hope some of you out there will find it useful too.
    Thanks to @daniel31x13 for making a awesome tool :heart_cyber: ⚡️.
    ---
    • Linkwarden github.com/linkwarden/linkwarden —  Self-hosted collaborative bookmark manager to collect, read, annotate, and fully preserve what matters, all in one place.
    • Announcing Linkwarden 2.11 blog.linkwarden.app/releases/2.11
    • Linkwarden Browser Extension github.com/linkwarden/browser-extension

    @[email protected] @selfhosting @[email protected] @selfhost #OpenSourceSoftware #TechForGood #Linkwarden #SelfHosted #FOSS #OpenSource #WebPreservation #Fediverse #LinuxUnplugged #SaveTheWeb #NoMore404 #TechCommunity #DigitalArchiving #LinkRot #PrivacyFirst #BookmarkManager #Bookmark

  12. ⚡️Linkwarden: The Self-Hosted Bookmark Manager That Solved a Problem I Didn’t Know I Had

    Thank you, Linux Unplugged and Jupiter Broadcasting @ironicbadger, for introducing me to Linkwarden—a FOSS gem that will change how I save, share, and preserve the web.

    Like many of you, I’ve been using browser bookmarks for years. I’d save articles, tutorials, and interesting links, only to find them gone when I finally got around to reading them. Link rot is real, and it’s frustrating. But until I heard about Linkwarden linkwarden.app/ on Linux Unplugged jupiterbroadcasting.com/, I didn’t realize how much I needed a better solution.

    I used to think, “Browser bookmarks are fine,” and honestly, backing them up manually from time to time isn’t a real trouble—just a slight inconvenience. My problem is that I experience massive link rot when looking into two-year-old links, often with interesting subjects on small sites—they are often just gone when I want to recall them. The problem is that saving the link isn’t saving any of the information.

    But Linkwarden @linkwarden isn’t just another bookmark manager—it’s a preservation powerhouse, a collaborative hub, and a self-hosted dream. And thanks to the folks at Jupiter Broadcasting, I now understand why it’s a game-changer.

    I haven’t started hosting it yet, but I definitely will, and I hope some of you out there will find it useful too.
    Thanks to @daniel31x13 for making a awesome tool :heart_cyber: ⚡️.
    ---
    • Linkwarden github.com/linkwarden/linkwarden —  Self-hosted collaborative bookmark manager to collect, read, annotate, and fully preserve what matters, all in one place.
    • Announcing Linkwarden 2.11 blog.linkwarden.app/releases/2.11
    • Linkwarden Browser Extension github.com/linkwarden/browser-extension

    @[email protected] @selfhosting @[email protected] @selfhost #OpenSourceSoftware #TechForGood #Linkwarden #SelfHosted #FOSS #OpenSource #WebPreservation #Fediverse #LinuxUnplugged #SaveTheWeb #NoMore404 #TechCommunity #DigitalArchiving #LinkRot #PrivacyFirst #BookmarkManager #Bookmark

  13. ⚡️Linkwarden: The Self-Hosted Bookmark Manager That Solved a Problem I Didn’t Know I Had

    Thank you, Linux Unplugged and Jupiter Broadcasting @ironicbadger, for introducing me to Linkwarden—a FOSS gem that will change how I save, share, and preserve the web.

    Like many of you, I’ve been using browser bookmarks for years. I’d save articles, tutorials, and interesting links, only to find them gone when I finally got around to reading them. Link rot is real, and it’s frustrating. But until I heard about Linkwarden linkwarden.app/ on Linux Unplugged jupiterbroadcasting.com/, I didn’t realize how much I needed a better solution.

    I used to think, “Browser bookmarks are fine,” and honestly, backing them up manually from time to time isn’t a real trouble—just a slight inconvenience. My problem is that I experience massive link rot when looking into two-year-old links, often with interesting subjects on small sites—they are often just gone when I want to recall them. The problem is that saving the link isn’t saving any of the information.

    But Linkwarden @linkwarden isn’t just another bookmark manager—it’s a preservation powerhouse, a collaborative hub, and a self-hosted dream. And thanks to the folks at Jupiter Broadcasting, I now understand why it’s a game-changer.

    I haven’t started hosting it yet, but I definitely will, and I hope some of you out there will find it useful too.
    Thanks to @daniel31x13 for making a awesome tool :heart_cyber: ⚡️.
    ---
    • Linkwarden github.com/linkwarden/linkwarden —  Self-hosted collaborative bookmark manager to collect, read, annotate, and fully preserve what matters, all in one place.
    • Announcing Linkwarden 2.11 blog.linkwarden.app/releases/2.11
    • Linkwarden Browser Extension github.com/linkwarden/browser-extension

    @[email protected] @selfhosting @[email protected] @selfhost #OpenSourceSoftware #TechForGood #Linkwarden #SelfHosted #FOSS #OpenSource #WebPreservation #Fediverse #LinuxUnplugged #SaveTheWeb #NoMore404 #TechCommunity #DigitalArchiving #LinkRot #PrivacyFirst #BookmarkManager #Bookmark

  14. 🤔 Apparently, the Internet Archive is the new Holy Grail 🏆 of history, but instead of knights, we have nerds wielding Z80s. 🤓 Meanwhile, web pages vanish faster than your New Year's resolutions. 🕰️ But don't worry, because some people think saving digital junk is like saving mankind. 🙄
    antirez.com/news/147 #InternetArchive #HolyGrail #DigitalPreservation #WebHistory #TechNerds #SaveTheWeb #HackerNews #ngated

  15. "…#historians of the future may struggle to understand fully how we lived our lives in the early 21st Century. That's because of a potentially history-deleting combination of how we live our lives digitally—and a paucity of official efforts to archive the world's information.
    However, an informal group of organisations are pushing back against the forces of digital #entropy. None is more synonymous with the fight to #savetheweb than the #InternetArchive…"

    bbc.com/future/article/2024091

  16. Been using @notesnook's Web Clipper to save articles I read online. So many great pieces disappear later! Anyone else do this?

    #webclipping #savetheweb #laterreads #internet #keepbackup #blog
  17. Been using @notesnook's Web Clipper to save articles I read online. So many great pieces disappear later! Anyone else do this?

    #webclipping #savetheweb #laterreads #internet #keepbackup #blog
  18. Been using @notesnook's Web Clipper to save articles I read online. So many great pieces disappear later! Anyone else do this?

    #webclipping #savetheweb #laterreads #internet #keepbackup #blog
  19. Been using @notesnook's Web Clipper to save articles I read online. So many great pieces disappear later! Anyone else do this?

    #webclipping #savetheweb #laterreads #internet #keepbackup #blog
  20. Been using @notesnook's Web Clipper to save articles I read online. So many great pieces disappear later! Anyone else do this?

    #webclipping #savetheweb #laterreads #internet #keepbackup #blog