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Down into the gopherhole
June 12th, 2022
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One of the main reasons that made me decide to delve deeper into the
slow/small Internet philosophies is social, rather than technical.
While studying participative systems during my PhD, I learned about
communities of practice and how bonds are created not just by sharing
the same activities, but also common language and tools. And in the
case of gopher, as well as gemini, focusing on a common activity based
on information sharing, while at the same time relying on a set of
tools which are purposely constrained, serves a greater purpose than
the one these tools were built for. To quote meff, a Usenet user
posting on comp.infosystems.gopher on May, 20th 2022:
"That said Gopher is fun. Hanging out on the net is fun. The web these
days is just where the "normies" from my school days hang out. I
didn't have much fun with them as a kid and I'm not having a lot of
fun with them now as an adult. Humans have always formed groups in any
space they socialize and I don't think the net is any different."
The idea of joining groups of like-minded people is always present in
different small Internet communities, no matter whether they are pubnix
systems, gopher blogs, or usenet groups. And, as stated in the Small
Internet Manifesto [1], these groups should be preferably small and
cohese (one of the points that large modern social networks often tend
to ignore, or do not facilitate enough).
For these reasons, it did not take me too much time to fall deep into
the gopherhole (but you might have already understood it has not been
just gopher!), with the same enthusiasm of an ethologist preparing for
a new research. I had been reading from sparse phlogs in a very random
way until recently, but when I decided to delve deeper into the topic I
realised there was way more material than I thought, both in terms of
resources (text files, but also tools and services) and communities.
Gopher itself has roughly doubled in size in the last 10 years, at
least for what concerns the number of servers (160 in 2012, 336 in
June 2022 [2]). New pubnix servers have been created, and old ones
such as SDF grew both in size and userbase. Usenet groups talk about
the resurgence of older systems and technologies. Mastodon (also due
to Elon Musk's attempt at acquiring Twitter) saw the number of toots
per week double in one month.
I have been reading a lot, taking notes, and experimenting with new
stuff. But most of all, I am seeing something I like, and with a pace
that is more compatible with my current life. I would like to document
it here, but I will also try to make it as simple as possible for me,
so expect something raw and without a regular cadence. And if for some
reason there is something you like and want to talk about, feel free
to drop me an email at mala@sdf.org.
[1] gopher://republic.circumlunar.space:70/0/~spring/phlog/2019-01-18__Small_Internet_Manifesto.txt
[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gopher_(protocol)