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Enshittification
Welcome to Enshittification
A community for everyone who misspelt it as enshitification.
"I the onceler felt sad as I watched them all go, but business is business and business must grow, regardless of crummies in tummies you know."
This is your space to document the decay, demise, and destruction of the tech world as we know it. Share stories, articles, and firsthand experiences that capture the ongoing decline of once-celebrated platforms, services, and companies in the late stage capitalist landscape.
From monopolistic corporate shifts to anti-user updates and the relentless pursuit of profit over quality—if it’s broken, bloated, or just plain bad, it belongs here. We’re here to spotlight the moves that make the tech world worse, one piece of enshittification at a time.
Guidelines
🔹 Stay on Topic: Only post content about the decline of tech products, platforms, or companies.
🔹 Quality Content: Give some context when posting links or articles to drive quality discussions.
🔹 Respectful Discussion: Critique companies, crappy tech, and capital, not community members.
🔹 Positive Monday: The first Monday of every month is reserved for positive content only that shows enshittification isn't inevitable.
Join us to expose the changes that ruin the things we once loved and to discuss what comes next in a tech world gone wrong.
“Need” is a very slippery word here. Countless conveniences are described as a “need” by addicts of convenience. You might say you /need/ to fill the CAPTCHA required by the unemployment office, when in fact you think you “need” to not spend the time it takes to do a paper application. Tim Wu’s Tyranny of Convenience essay gives a good perspective on this. We don’t need the conveniences that we think we need.
That’s not to say real needs don’t manifest, but people’s ability to make the distinction is dodgy for sure. Luckily one person solving a CAPTCHA unavoidably for a true need is not going to be a significant enabler in the grand scheme of things if people generally refuse such garbage.
Boycotts, for example, do not require everyone to participate. There is a critical mass by which if the threshold of rebels mounts, it will cause change that even benefits the pushovers. In a lot of situations, we would only need 10% or so of users to have a constitution and to honor it.
Boycotts need not suit everyone. We just need a notable number of consumers with willpower and discipline to turn things around.