It feels like gopherspace is tense these days. I've been reading phlogs expressing great concern about what this space is ... and what it can be. I don't feel that way. I find the self-hosted nature of gopher liberating and the content fascinating. It's all so DIY.... and human. Solderpunk wrote a phlog post quite a while ago called "host something," or something to that effect. That's the greatest thing about this little corner of the internet. So many people are making it happen. That's something. There's all this talk about open source and libre software, but the most important thing is not the software -- or the hardware -- it's having a space for free _people_ to express themselves without moderation. And for that space to exist, it has to belong to those people, not to some supervising entity that can twist the nature of the space to serve their financial interests. Anyone can spend a few dollars and fire up a raspberry pi as a server -- or just get an account on someone else's micro-pubnix -- and be a part of this .... is it a community? Is it an agglomeration of strangers talking to each other and sometimes across one another? I don't know. But I like it. And I like that we're our unmoderated selves (or at least that our moderation is self-moderation). I even like that we don't know if anyone is going to read what we wrote[1] and that there's no like button[2] (great pieces, by the way, losthalo and kvothe). You may like this post. You may not. You may write something to tell me what you think. But you won't (I hope) count up all the likes and hates this phlog receives. If you do, email the results to visiblink@ zaibatsu.circumlunar.space to ruin my day... Solderpunk wrote about the Finnish girls hockey team being glued to their phones in a public ceremony[3]. I've seen similar things from time to time, but I wouldn't take that moment (and that very powerful image) as representative of the modern zeitgeist. A few years ago, I was really worried that the young were going to turn into a tribe of phone-obsessed zombies. But these days, I meet a lot of very intelligent, introspective, genuinely nice young people, and they seem to be able to put away their phones and interact with other human beings for extended periods of time. Many of them are very creative and artistic, and get involved in all kinds of community events and activities. I know that's not what people expect to hear, but it's what I'm seeing. I see the same thing here. Smart, introspective people expressing themselves. You people are really intriguing, though you don't write enough.... ;) In some ways I wish that more people would join us. In others, I know that that's not what I really want. This is a counter-culture. Most people won't join us on port 70 (even though setting up a gopher server had the lowest learning curve of anything I've done on the small internet), and I kind of like that. I need something to make me feel a little unique (or peculiar? I don't know). For years, I've been reading that 20?? will be the year of the Linux desktop. God forbid! I like being part of the 1 or 2%. So for me, the small internet is best because it's small. Because it's DIY. Because it's human. Keep hosting and posting. Keep talking about your Palm pilots, anti-capitalist biases, drug habits, deer kills, moving adventures, furry tendencies(!!!) and the like. Cat, I know I'm not going to save gopher, but I kind of feel like gopher is actually saving me[4]. [1] gopher://zaibatsu.circumlunar.space/0/%7elosthalo/nusuth/nusuth-20190601.txt [2] gopher://zaibatsu.circumlunar.space/1/%7ekvothe/phlog/2019-06-01-anticommercial/ [3] gopher://zaibatsu.circumlunar.space/0/%7esolderpunk/phlog/cycles-of-optimism-and-pessimism.txt [4] gopher://baud.baby/0/phlog/fs20190530.txt gopher://baud.baby/0/phlog/fs20190531.txt