Ask HN: How can we keep (part of) the web human?

Any ideas for how we can keep the web (or at least part of it) human?

It feels like every time I do a web search, more and more of the results are AI generated nonsense.

I'm worried that it's going to become much more difficult to find the human-generated content.

How can we keep a part of the web human? Any ideas? (I'm not keen on Sam Altman’s eyeball-scanning Orb being the "solution.")

33 points | by pajamasam 7 hours ago

17 comments

  • codingdave 6 hours ago
    Step back a few more steps. Maybe the web has run its course, and we need to engage with each other in other ways. Even aside from the obvious IRL options, maybe voice and real-time interaction should gain traction again. Maybe we need completely new inventions to help us share content and thoughts. Maybe the web can go the way of gopher and become the subject of future story-telling: "Man, remember back when that was how we interacted? Crazy, right?"

    We should move forward, not sideways.

    • selfhoster11 6 hours ago
      Given that the old web was as much of a repository of information as a way to connect, the new thing shouldn't involve unsearchable, temporary comms that work only in real time. Forcing the new thing to be synchronous or near-synchronous would be a terrible waste of subject matter experts' time too.
    • onemoresoop 6 hours ago
      All these ways are very harvestable by AI companies. I think the only way is IRL and more people spaces where technology only exists on devices and everything is decentralized.
    • pajamasam 4 hours ago
      I like your thinking! Thank you for taking the time to give your thoughts :)
  • Apreche 6 hours ago
    A lot of the web is human. You just can’t discover it. It doesn’t rank highly in search results. It doesn’t go viral on social networks. It doesn’t get wildly upvoted on aggregator sites like this one.

    That’s the fundamental dilemma of not just the web, but the Internet, as a pull medium opposed to a push medium like television or radio. A human can not remember every URL. From your blank web browser you can only go to URLs you know. Then the only web pages you will ever see are ones that are linked, directly or indirectly, from the ones you know.

    Most people only know Google, Facebook, etc. Anything that isn’t linked to from those sites effectively does not exist.

    But it does exist. It’s a whole forest full of trees falling and not making a sound. It’s up to you to do what you can to find it.

    • pajamasam 4 hours ago
      For sure. I agree. Maybe I should rephrase to "how can we make the human stuff discoverable again?" Or, can we make tools to help people to find it? Because if people can't find it, less and less people will use it and then it will later become inactive. Or, should we tell people by word of mouth again?
    • ge96 6 hours ago
      I wonder if registrars provide lists of bought domain names vs. trying to map IPV4 which has multiple domains pointing to same ip

      would be interesting to do mapping yourself though probably pointless with how much effort/time it would take

      does remind me of this fun video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JcJSW7Rprio

      • pajamasam 4 hours ago
        I don't quite understand what would be the goal behind this?
        • ge96 3 hours ago
          The video or my comment?

          My comment is about finding random websites that exist regardless of ranking, just randomly find stuff on the Internet.

    • mathgeek 6 hours ago
      Perhaps some examples would help? The human-centric web I remember was centered on sharing things you found.
  • dogleash 6 hours ago
    Even before AI the human element was being drown out.

    The neat internet thing was neat for a while because power hadn't worked out how to exploit it for their own ends. They have now, the genie doesn't go back in the bottle.

    • pajamasam 4 hours ago
      Does that mean we need to invent some new thing or rather go back to IRL? And what about news, media, etc. Do we create physical copies again?
  • lee-rhapsody 7 hours ago
    Going back to forums locked behind accounts would be a good first step.
    • onemoresoop 6 hours ago
      > Going back to forums locked behind accounts would be a good first step.

      How do you ensure the accounts aren't AI bots or people who scrap and serve it all back to the AI soup pot? The identity seems to be quite a problem online.

      • muzani 3 hours ago
        Charge an entry fee like Something Awful does.

        The entry fee let them be a lot more chaotic too - people who go too far and piss someone off would get kicked out and forced to pay money to rejoin again. But it put a price tag on trolling, unlike platforms like Instagram. So people could do it and somehow get better at it until it turns into comedy.

      • selfhoster11 6 hours ago
        Invite-only, the way private torrent trackers still do it. Which has its own problems, but if you limit the number of invitees a given user can bring in and other such restrictions, it makes it practically impossible to for bots to make up a good chunk of the userbase.
        • pajamasam 4 hours ago
          Invite-only sounds like a good idea. Especially if you need multiple people to approve invites. However, one or a few people might get greedy and add bots.
          • selfhoster11 4 hours ago
            A lot of invite-only trackers solve that with a reputation system: if your invitees get banned, you also get warned or banned.
      • JohnMakin 6 hours ago
        Yes, and account creation automation is quite trivial in the majority of cases.
    • ASalazarMX 4 hours ago
      Forums worked (and still do) because they're small niches, like the budding Internet. As soon as they become big, they lose their sense of community, and become profitable to spam.

      So, maybe we have to choose between isolated human islands vs. an ad-and-SEO-infested world?

      • skhameneh 2 hours ago
        > Forums worked (and still do)

        They worked and they often worked quite well. Unfortunately, many of those “working” forums I frequented are now inactive. It’s tough to visit some and see it’s been many years since the last post on some - and those are just the ones that are still online.

      • pajamasam 4 hours ago
        > isolated human islands Good point. But how does one find these? Through word-of-mouth, I guess?
        • ASalazarMX 2 hours ago
          Yes, or exploration in the case of USENET or pre-enshittified social networks.
    • pajamasam 7 hours ago
      Like Reddit, you mean? Or with some extra authentication mechanism?
      • egypturnash 6 hours ago
        hahaha god Reddit is fucking full of people who are clearly using AI to write or edit their posts, I get so many people trying to glaze me like ChatGPT does now and it's so fucking creepy.
        • pajamasam 4 hours ago
          Yeah, that's why I asked to get clarity on what exactly they meant with accounts.
      • burnt-resistor 6 hours ago
        Sounds about right. Prove you're a real human through some sort of identification verification process. Probably would lead to better conversations, especially if each person could have only one account.
        • tayo42 6 hours ago
          They typical Instagram and Facebook comment section proves this wrong lol
        • sunrunner 6 hours ago
          > Prove you're a real human

          Ah, so Worldcoin then?

        • ASalazarMX 4 hours ago
          New AI service idea: this human doesn't exist, complete with plausible fictional ids.

          uh... for security awareness.

        • ranger_danger 6 hours ago
          I am quite skeptical it would help. The majority of users on forums already aren't AI, and from my personal experience in the last couple decades on many different forums, there's already an abundance of egotistical, dogmatic god complexes around to make the experience insufferable enough already.
          • vincnetas 6 hours ago
            And there also adversaries who are paid to post. Proper reputation system is needed to fight that.
          • sunrunner 6 hours ago
            > an abundance of egotistical, dogmatic god complexes around to make the experience insufferable enough already.

            And you can find a curated list of these people on r/LinkedInLunatics, though I'm not sure the curation is necessary as it seems like pretty much the _entirety_ of LinkedIn posts are the kind that make you question whether the poster is human.

            There's marketing and building a personal brand, and then there's whatever the heck LinkedIn in 2025 is...

    • jay_kyburz 6 hours ago
      I imagine people will soon have AI post here and other logged in forums on behalf of them. Try and rack up Karma or build reputation.
      • onemoresoop 6 hours ago
        I think some are already doing this.
  • egypturnash 7 hours ago
    Get a job at someone pushing AI. Sabotage. You're smart, you can do it subtly enough that it just looks like you're kind of incompetent.
    • onemoresoop 6 hours ago
      Too bad these jobs pay well and attract people who are quite myopic and drink all the koolaid.
      • egypturnash 6 hours ago
        Yeah, the first challenge is learning how to sound like someone who's drunk the koolaid without letting it actually affect you.
        • pajamasam 4 hours ago
          I think sometimes it's naivety, unfortunately, in young graduates especially. With a touch of greediness and ambition. I guess the greediness takes precedence once they're not so naive anymore.
      • muzani 3 hours ago
        Go in from the data angle. They treat people like cattle and it's $15/hour.
  • petemilly 6 hours ago
    https://blogroll.org is a neat project that curates personal blogs. One of the curators (Manu) also has a weekly blogger interview series that I enjoy: https://peopleandblogs.com
  • o-o- 5 hours ago
    We're missing a piece of middleware technology. Imagine a network like Reddit or IMDB that:

    a) offers posting under anonymity, b) allows users to associate with exactly one physical passport, c) has no knowledge of who an account belongs to, d) allows for filtering on content by passport-authenticated users.

  • muzani 3 hours ago
    It's the search engine (i.e. Google) not catching up. There seems to be a conflict of interest here in a search engine and a pro-AI company.

    New technologies are going to break old ones. We'll probably see more discovery tech emerge again with AI in mind.

  • stego-tech 6 hours ago
    Virtual networks (dn42, tor, etc) or Virtual Private Networks (Tailscale, Wireguard) would be my knee-jerk recommendation. Adding a core abstraction at the network layer immediately fouls up all but the most diligently-coded AI bots out there, as does an abstraction at the Transport layer that's different from the traditional internet. In the short-term, I expect more humans to retreat into these sorts of enclaves as scrapers and AI slop make the public internet untenable to use.

    In the long run...I couldn't tell you. This feels like the sort of schism Cyberpunk stories are made of, when a utopia of data sharing is perverted into a swamp of automated bots and agents, blindly following obsolete programming and untethered from the controls of their creators, harming whatever infrastructure is connected to the public internet without adequate security. I'd like to think smarter people than myself (shoutout to Xe Iaso for Anubis) will create tools to protect humans and our online presence from the bots, but I'm not super hopeful of their success in the face of present profit-motives for AI Companies to defeat them.

    Perhaps the answer is to simply devalue the internet as an entity, and thereby destroy incentive to scrape or pollute it at such a scale. Maybe it's yanking services offline and putting them back in the real world, or privacy laws and insurance companies making data hoarding untenable and unaffordable for companies to engage in. Maybe it's identity validation at the point of connectivity, verifying smart cards or identification before you're allowed online (incredibly dystopian and the stuff of Pal*ntir's wet dreams).

    I honestly couldn't tell you right now what the long game looks like. Only to find your humans, build your digital fortresses, and help each other as best you can.

    • pajamasam 4 hours ago
      Great answer, thank you.
      • abnercoimbre 2 hours ago
        I'm touched by it, and I'll start taking action immediately.
  • sim04ful 6 hours ago
    What if we shifted our focus entirely from the source of information to how useful and accurate it is?

    I can't see how the prevalent value system could avoid being "sapio-supremacist" ? is "future proof" to include intelligences that are artificial but whose "sentience" is otherwise human equivalent or "greater"

    • pajamasam 4 hours ago
      I don't just want useful and accurate information. I want fun, creative, funny content that I can relate to.
      • pajamasam 4 hours ago
        Also, multiple perspectives.
    • bbarnett 6 hours ago
      Setup web forums, include ToS which indicates service is denied using automated tools.

      People have been charged with telecommunication related crimes for hscking, and the tos csn indicate access denial.

      This gated access won't stop AI, but will make account usage illegal.

      People have been convicted for far less. May as well use such laws to our advantage for once.

      That's the best path I can see.

    • zeroCalories 6 hours ago
      Is this an argument for AI? First, AI slop sucks. Second, even if it stopped sucking, it would need good input data, which it will need for a top 5 dish soap recommendation until it can do my dishes for me. Third, I want more than just useful information.
  • tolerance 6 hours ago
    Make friends in real life and only use the internet as a commerce/information exchange platform.
  • BaudouinVH 6 hours ago
    all the Gemini-verse feels more human than the web to me nowadays. My two cents.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gemini_(protocol)

  • JohnMakin 6 hours ago
  • Animats 6 hours ago
    Go back to Facebook's Real Names rule. Require Know Your Customer validation. No fake name postings. Maybe allow explicit anonymous posting, but readers can block.
    • muzani 2 hours ago
      I did social media before and we used verified phone numbers, no email verification. It drastically cut down on fake accounts. Don't make the phone numbers public of course.

      We expanded it to social media accounts like FB and Google. It went up a bit. But FB caused a lot of issues with little gain. Eventually Apple ID came in, let people make anon accounts and forced us to adopt it. So we cut out social media accounts along with all the people who had accounts. All in all, non-phone made up about 10% of logins, so it was fine.

    • onemoresoop 6 hours ago
      Facebook or any other corpo is not to be trusted with anything again.
    • selfhoster11 6 hours ago
      No, thank you. I'd sooner cancel my Internet contract.
  • dannyobrien 6 hours ago
    "It feels like" -- the first step I would make is to try and better understand what you're seeing. How often does this happen, compared to what you assume is human? Is it increasing? At what rate? Are there papers that confirm your assessment?
    • pajamasam 4 hours ago
      This sounds like an AI-generated reply haha
  • anxoo 6 hours ago
    if you can't think of a way to reliably distinguish AIs from humans, that observation alone should raise great concerns which eclipse "spam comments on forums" or "bad results on google"
    • mbauman 6 hours ago
      OP (and I) can definitely distinguish the two. The trouble is that I can no longer find the humans who are actually posting valuable information.
  • jay_kyburz 6 hours ago
    I'd be interested in building a curated and moderated web. A special browser with an address whitelist. Some kind of democratic curation of content with a small paywall to reduce the noise.

    Or alternatively, improve pagerank to exclude low quality content and pages that contain ads.

    • qznc 5 hours ago
      Could be just a browser plugin to show a quality mark (or the opposite)?
    • pajamasam 4 hours ago
      Agreed. And the paywall would hopefully help keep (some) of the bots out.

      On the democratic curation though, how do you ensure that bots aren't voting?

      I guess you can start with a super small group of curators who you know personally and then slowly branch out?