At the risk of sounding like a crank or a grouch, I gotta disaggree on this one. I am now writing from a public library, where I actually had to show I/friggin/D - my passport - to get on a computer. (But at least no cookies or whatnot are accessing my personal computer at home.)
Yes - to me, forcing logins is an onerous violation of my personal privacy. Reminds me of my time in the USSR in the 80's: you were surveilled and followed constantly. Sometimes they wouldn't even try to conceal themselves.
I also remember CB clubs in the 70's. You bought the equipment and you could go play. Nobody knew who you were, where you were parked, or were you lived. You just tuned in on, say, 37 Lower Sideband, Thursdays at 7:30pm, and chatted with all your friends. Once in a while the gang would meet at a Denny's or something. You didn't do stupid things like blurt out phone numbers or credit card numbers, 'cuz ANYONE could be listening - including the police, which is why you didn't try to coordinate a downtown bank heist on the air either. But wonderful fun on the whole.
Yeah, there would be a troll once in a while who would barge into the group (I forgot the CB slang for such an intruder) play music**, key over people, etc, and we'd have to deal with that, usually by switching channels and times.
Technically some SF-types would tell us that somewhere a zillion miles away those radio waves are still out there, entertaining or perhaps confusing some other aliens listening in. But practically speaking, those conversations are lost amid a million calls of "Breaker One-Nine" and "Skipland-Skipland-Skipland."
Now this forum is like a house party but where there's a webcam in every room, and every conversation is recorded. By whom and what for? Either way, it's a whole lot less fun, loving, and spontaneous this way.
For me, the Internet should operate today like CB radio did back then: universal, anonymous, and free to use. And fun.
My opinion. :cry:
Geirr, AMV Coordinator, and
"KBOF1549" a very long time ago...
**which was not only illegal, but it invariably sounded like crap...