There was once a time when memes and funny erotice sex scenesinternet-born jokes were a novelty enjoyed by relatively few people – the kind who would describe themselves as Extremely Online. Maybe you'd take pride in quoting a niche Vine that only a few select IRL friends will have seen and spent your evenings connecting with mutuals on Twitter or scrolling niche fandom accounts. Crucially, you had an understanding of internet culture that the average person probably didn't. But in 2025, it's very difficult to make that claim.
Because while internet trends and buzzwords were once an inside joke, it's now practically impossible to keep anything on social media a secret. This feels particularly pressing in the wake of BRAT summer, a concept which was cool for, approximately, five minutes and is now being referenced by Facebook mums as part of their daily vocabulary and was used in Kamala Harris' presidential campaign. Similarly, seven or eight years ago, had Jools Lebron shared her "very demure" video on Vine, rather than on TikTok last year, it might have had potential to be a private gag between you and your other very online friend, rather than the concept for at least four fashion brands' autumn campaigns. All of this to say, the idea that you can be more online than anyone else with an iPhone and an Instagram account is ostensibly extinct.
SEE ALSO: Jools Lebron, the creator of 'very demure, very mindful,' might not own its trademarkPlus, many people who once made their internet usage a personality trait called Twitter their home. But since the site has been taken over by Elon Musk and renamed to the aptly apocalyptic-sounding X, a lot of internet veterans are struggling to find a place where they can share the memes and internal monologues they once relied on the little blue bird for. Even those who migrated to TikTok are now facing the fact that the app might not exist for much longer, with the new ban in the U.S. looming on April 5 and many creators looking for alternative ways to share content online.
This doesn't mean that people aren't spending time on the internet anymore. If anything, the opposite is true, with Gen Z spending an average of 4.5 hours per day on social media, according to a report from consumer research platform GWIpublished in 2023. But finding online spaces or communities that feel specific to you or private in any sense is far more difficult than it was once. So, even if your feeds do feel individualised and personalised to you, it's hard not to feel that, in one way or another, you're consuming more or less exactly the same content as anyone else.
The main reason for this is, simply put, algorithms. You've probably noticed that the way you're served content on almost every social media app — be it TikTok, Instagram or X — nowadays has changed. Where once you'd see posts created by people you chose to follow, now apps mainly serve up recommended content based on people and things it thinks you might be interested in. "The platform’s algorithms base their recommendations on content you have liked and engaged with," explains Dr. Carolina Are, social media researcher at Northumbria University’s Centre for Digital Citizens.
There are benefits to this, of course, in that it might help you come across content that you really enjoy and wouldn't have discovered otherwise. This also explains why meme culture has become so widespread, as if a fairly small group of people are enjoying a particularly funny meme, the algorithm will push this out to a much wider number of people very quickly. "This has become a faster, more efficient and more economic, if not always accurate, way of governing swathes of content worldwide," Are says.
But it also means it's very hard to form and maintain small communities based on common interests or experiences online nowadays, as they're often catapulted to far more people than intended, whether they're the correct audience or not. Plus, remaining part of a digital community can be difficult when you're being served so much new content rather than the posts created by accounts you follow.
"It feels like the algorithm wants you to see stuff you don't like."
Izzy, who is 27 and lives in London, has been using social media since 2009 and spent most of the 2010s very engaged with what was then Twitter. "I used to tweet hundreds of times a day," she says, adding: "I've definitely always considered myself to be very online. I do enjoy being that person that knows every internet reference and meme." However, Izzy recently decided to stop using X and her decision was based on the app's algorithm: "It feels like the algorithm wants you to see stuff you don't like so that you engage with it and it also shows your stuff to people who won't like it," she says, explaining that this was making her experience of using social media almost entirely negative.
This is in stark comparison to the way Izzy and many other very online people would use apps like Twitter in the early to mid 2010s, connecting with mutual followers you probably considered genuine friends and finding a safe space of sorts on the internet. Often when you're scrolling now, it probably feels less like you're engaging with real people or friends, given that so many brands have such an active presence on social media nowadays. And not to mention influencers who, although are undoubtedly real-life people (unless you count the AI influencers), don't always necessarily feel like it when you consume their content through your screen.
"Algorithms like TikTok's For You Page push popularity and not network building, encouraging users to engage as ‘the public’ rather than someone to have a meaningful interaction with," Are says. "The follower is no longer a peer, they’re the audience, while the creator is more similar to a conventional, mainstream media broadcaster than to an independent creator."
"My social feeds are dominated by influencers and personalities."
"My social feeds are dominated by influencers and personalities," says 27-year-old Charlotte, who now works on social media but, like Izzy, was very online throughout her teenage years. "You do create this parasocial relationship where you feel like you know them," she adds. Izzy agrees that this has been one of the biggest changes in her experience of using social media during the past decade: "I do think brands and influencers dominate my social media a lot more - it's constantly ads on my feed. I choose to follow my friends and often I don't see their stuff," she says.
SEE ALSO: What are parasocial relationships?This is one of the main shifts we've seen in the content that's posted and consumed on social media now and one of the reasons why those very online communities have disintegrated over the years. "The sense of community can be lost while celebrity is gained and content becomes about selling instead of connecting," Are says
"Ten years ago, I made friends through twitter and even though there were some people who would feel unattainable in a way, it was nothing like it is now," Charlotte says. In this way, the death of being very online goes a lot further than just the dissemination of meme culture and the lack of inside internet jokes. It reflects the lack of space for genuine interaction and meaningful communities online right now, something that was once considered to be one of the main plus sides of social media.
"There aren't really niche internet jokes anymore..."
And given that social media is so heavily commercialised nowadays, with ads taking up every other post on apps like Instagram and X, and influencers, even smaller creators, actively trying to monetize their content, it feels as though it's lost any sense of playfulness and fun. "There aren't really niche internet jokes anymore because you have trend forecasters and people whose jobs it is to hop on these trends and make it about a brand," Izzy says adding: "The memes aren't as funny when you know they're going to be co-opted."
No one scrolling through Tumblr in 2014 or tweeting about One Direction in their teenage bedroom would have predicted that they were living through the golden age of social media, but that might just be the case. It's certainly safe to say that millennials who once considered themselves very online were certainly having more fun on social media than young people probably are now, with 30 percent of young people aspiring towards a career as an influencer, undoubtedly spending their time scrolling thinking about how they can monetise their favourite meme and figuring out how to hack the algorithm to promote their content.
So, even though you might lament the fact that you don't have a hold over internet culture anymore and that even trying to do so can be depressing, be thankful that now is probably the best time to become very, very offline.
The NFL signs a new Verizon deal that's great for consumersA bot wrote a new Harry Potter chapter and it's delightfully hilarious2018 Golden Globe nominations: See full listFormer Facebook exec says network is 'destroying how social works'Which houseplants make the best gifts?Watch what could happen if you forget to water your Christmas treeDoes 'The Last Jedi' confirm a Finn/Poe romance or other LGBT characters?'Game of Thrones' characters will keep traveling in Season 8Saoirse Ronan isn't having the backlash around that Aer Lingus sketch on 'SNL'The NFL signs a new Verizon deal that's great for consumersFormer Facebook exec says network is 'destroying how social works'Ratatouille turns 10: WHERE IS HE NOW?Grandma accidentally buys super sexy Christmas decorationsGrandma accidentally buys super sexy Christmas decorationsLouis Tomlinson fans abuse radio host on Twitter after facial hair jokeSnowstorm hits Buffalo and no one can actually see the NFL game going on10 best 'Game of Thrones' moments from Season 7Researchers to listen for signs of life from interstellar asteroidThe secret meaning behind the NBA's esports league logoThe last great internet debate of 2017 is: How should you cut your toast? India is majorly changing the way its streets light up at night Hinge's new captions can get you twice the likes Don’t freak out, that Nutella cancer study is far from confirmed The Guardian claims WhatsApp's encryption contains a 'backdoor' This driverless car will hit South Korea roads this year How Jadeveon Clowney went from draft bust to forceful freak of nature Nintendo Switch's battery life may disappoint you 'Big Bang Theory' co Facebook changes policy on editing posts Cool kid pranks store by putting his face on every device We made the Young Pope an online dating profile just in case People are hating on India's national airline for wanting to reserve seats for women Elon Musk's SpaceX absolutely needs its satellite internet business to work A refugee who took a selfie with Angela Merkel is suing Facebook Nickelodeon's plans for an underwater Spongebob Squarepants attraction has sparked outrage Nintendo Switch's Joy What’s the best business structure for a first At least 1,000 more buses ask to park for Women's March than Trump's inauguration Indians upset over calendar featuring PM Narendra Modi on the cover Perfectly frozen fox is eerie reminder that nature is cruel
1.3665s , 10220.765625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【funny erotice sex scenes】,Co-creation Information Network