Lately both I've been questioning myself how internet has changed in this 20 years and getting more information about the '70 counterculture movment, so thanks for this article which it comes handy to me.
Having said that, what platform are for you nowadays internet counterculture examples?
Because, excluding dark net websites, everything …
Lately both I've been questioning myself how internet has changed in this 20 years and getting more information about the '70 counterculture movment, so thanks for this article which it comes handy to me.
Having said that, what platform are for you nowadays internet counterculture examples?
Because, excluding dark net websites, everything that can feell on the web counterculture apparently, then it doesn't because information run so fast that one day seems to appear a counterculture space the next an influencer make a video about it and everyone knows about it and even how to access to it, making it lots more mainstream.
I think there are imageboards and forums that are countercultural. I also think there are groups that live on social media and 'subvert' the expectations. But as with all counterculture -- and PLEASE EXCUSE THIS -- the real threat is capitalism. Punk will never not end up a multi-million dollar business.
Lately both I've been questioning myself how internet has changed in this 20 years and getting more information about the '70 counterculture movment, so thanks for this article which it comes handy to me.
Having said that, what platform are for you nowadays internet counterculture examples?
Because, excluding dark net websites, everything that can feell on the web counterculture apparently, then it doesn't because information run so fast that one day seems to appear a counterculture space the next an influencer make a video about it and everyone knows about it and even how to access to it, making it lots more mainstream.
I think there are imageboards and forums that are countercultural. I also think there are groups that live on social media and 'subvert' the expectations. But as with all counterculture -- and PLEASE EXCUSE THIS -- the real threat is capitalism. Punk will never not end up a multi-million dollar business.