2019-12-12 - I made dat ----------------------- I made a site using the dat protocol. The site is an amalgam, of sorts. I am burned out on the internet. I refuse to be commoditized by companies which have no respect for law, for privacy, for democracy, for the values which I hold. I have been putting the energies which I previously wasted on my blog into gopherspace - gopher, the system I first experienced the "internet" on, many years ago. I am also interested in the decentralized internet. It, and the systems it offers to reclaim our voices absent the control and surveillance systems of the modern "web", is something that I can really get excited about. There's a huge problem, however, in that much of the decentralized space is shackled by idiotic subservience to the blockchain. Enter dat. The dat protocol - https://docs.datproject.org - is a decentralized system which doesn't rely on blockchain. Getting a site up on the dat-web is a task of elemental simplicity. I had previously run a dat version of my homesite - https://ascraeus.org - but I seem to have gotten a little lost on the way. Bloated, swollen, the site was just a repeat of the surveillance-crippled homepage. Thinking anew recently, I thought I could bring the same interest I now have in my gopher site to the decentralized internet. Using the same simple text-based posts to create a site for myself in this new and interesting world. Using the same functionality provided by the hugo static site generator I used for my homesite, I recreated my phlog on the dat:// protocol. All 290kb of it. That's just 82kb larger than the size of the text files on my gopher. To access the dat site, you'll need to use the beaker browser. My dat is at: dat://7659c6b87ae04f979ecfc24d136242ad0b6105ed3818d651e99216b31ceaf58b or you can just use dat://ascraeus.org What do I hope to achieve by this? Nothing. I'm not sure anyone reads my phlog, let alone will be troubled to read the same content over an arcane and complex protocol. But by doing *something* I am doing more than doing *nothing*. If my use of dat:// helps in any way to normalise use of the protocol, then I'm happy. Thank you for reading.