Considering the proliferation of AI-generated slop, as well as the lines between satire and reality being blurred, I wonder if future historians will have a harder time understanding what was really going on.

  • Hemingways_Shotgun@lemmy.ca
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    11 hours ago

    My oh my. Check out Mr. Optimist over here thinking that they’ll be time to be “historians” in between scavenging for scraps and battling the nuclear mutants for the last bottle of fresh water at the bombed out Tesco.

    • Aphelion@lemm.ee
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      10 hours ago

      Well la-dee-dah! Look at Mr. “I think humans will still exist in 1000 years” over here. Let’s be real, we’re on track to extinct ourselves in the next 200 years if we don’t make some very difficult and dramatic changes to our behavior.

      • ComicalMayhem@lemmy.world
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        10 hours ago

        200 years? lmao, look everyone, this guy thinks our planet will support human life for another 200 years. At best another 80.

        • Anti_Iridium@lemmy.world
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          6 hours ago

          I mean, not to be captain optimist here, but human extinction is a bit far. Humans are extremely adaptable, even if they have to carve out a niche in the worst case hellscape they will survive.

          Might not exactly be comfortable.

  • Boomer Humor Doomergod@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    A “dark age” is really just one where records didn’t survive, not that it was particularly bad. This usually follows a breakdown of power structures but the real loss is that we can’t know what happened.

    I’m worried that transitioning so much to fragile digital technology could result in massive amounts of knowledge and culture being inaccessible, like that guy’s hard drive full of Bitcoin.

    And it’s not just all of society that will be lost, but family history as well. Photographs and letters survive a long, long time. But without strict preservation and keeping old formats alive my grandkids won’t be able to flip through old photos of my family like I can with an old photo album.

  • WatDabney@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    13 hours ago

    Some kind of dark ages - yes.

    I suspect it will be considered the Lunatic Age or the Misinformation Age or the Willfully Ignorant Age or something like that, since its most distinctive characteristic, in retrospect, is likely to be the oddity that the creation of the most efficient and comprehensive information-sharing system the world has yet seen led pretty much directly to a worldwide epidemic of ignorance, stupidity, irrationality, and insanity.

  • AbouBenAdhem@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    If the dark ages were so called due to the shortage of sources, ours will be called the glare-blind age in contrast.

    • Sanctus@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      Yeah this is exactly what they want. No Voice, Free Exit sounds a lot like no representation and slavery to me.

  • Grandwolf319@sh.itjust.works
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    7 hours ago

    Depends if you mean dark ages by not a lot of information that survives or economic stagnation.

    First one idk but we are fully in an economic stagnation period due to late stage capitalism impeding innovation.

    So historians might think that not much happened as in not much that is worth remembering happened.