Skip Navigation

What happened to techbros from the 90s to now?

I think your average geek used to be like, somewhat academic and erudite and into arcane knowledge and had some level of good faith of wanting to engage in discussion

Now it's all frauds and absolutely braindead elon stans and crypto dipshits and conservative freaks and people who enjoy and defend watching big tech destroy everything.

77 comments
  • It’s a tale as old as Capitalism. People who geek out about something do it because they enjoy it, then somebody finds a way to improve distribution of their work and suddenly there’s a skyrocket in demand. Vultures swoop in and suck out whatever life might be left in their passionate work to make it profitable, and then all the passion is gone.

    “Tech bro” is the term used to describe those vultures. People who try to monetize the shit out of everything with an ounce of human soul in it. Passionate tech nerds are still out there, mostly in FOSS circles, some in hardware hobbyist circles building cool form factors for their own computers.

    Honestly, odds are you’ll find passion only in someone who’s not looking to monetize.

    • I think it's important to note the difference between "make a living to keep things going" vs. "I want to make 'fuck you' money."

      I have no problem with people who make a good product and seek donations or sell their product at a reasonable price.

      Hell, take uBlock Origin. I'd easily pay $10 / month for this but they do not want money. So I do what they request and donate to the people who make the filters.

      This is the first year in perhaps a decade I won't be giving to the Mozilla Foundation because they are enshittifying their product. I wrote to them and told them why I won't be donating. I don't know if it will make a difference but I'm keeping an eye on them over the next year.

  • What I think a lot of people fail to put together, is that this is the end-game of the early ideologies of the internet. The ideologies of the tech nerds now are directly descended from earlier, more decentralized ideologies.

    Think about internet piracy and the change from Napster to Bittorrent.

    In the tech world, even since the early days, tech was seen as a way to route around bad laws. In the early days, copyright laws were viewed as overly draconian (they are, but that's not the point), so piracy flourished by routing around the legal framework.

    What has happened is the power and wealth of some people with those ideologies have grown so big, they now view all laws that prevent them from doing whatever the hell they want as "bad laws to route around." That's why you have Musk buying Twitter and forcing his opinion's down everyone's throat (routing around traditional media). That's why you have Jack Dorsey dumping his money into Nostr, because he thinks the worst sin on the internet is censorship (routing around attempts to rein in disinformation/misinformation).

    It can be seen at OpenAI where they knowingly used books3 to initially train their AIs, which was well known to have been sourced from piracy. OpenAI doesn't care about the provenance of the data as long as they can legally route around the copyright issue and make a fuckton of money in the process.

    Anyway, it's a deeply libertarian ideology that was accidentally spurred from earlier, more anarchist ideologies, within the tech community. I would peg tech nerds from the 90s as more anarchist, and tech nerds of the modern era as having bought into the technolibertarianism that began to grow out of it.

    Like Steve Wozniak is your standard real tech nerd from the 70's who was the actual engineer behind Apple products, while Steve Jobs was literally the marketing guy yet only the marketing guy got remembered.

  • Crypto bros are a subset of the cryptocurrency community. Some of us managed to make enough money to retire, and now we spend our days contributing to open source projects

  • That sounds not much different from the tech bros back then. The vast majority of them were always posers. Anyone with any talent has made their money by now and dropped out of the rat race, the rest of them are either in middle management or drunk themselves to death.

  • I'm a technerd from the late 90s and early 00s. We're all still here living our best lives, making money off the newest hypes, and then going home to chat on IRC and fiddle around with our old, soulful protocols.

  • In the past you had to actually be smart to be a "tech bro". The barrier of entry was higher.

    Now any dipshit can get online and start being a "tech bro".

    It's basically the same as the enshitification of the internet. Used to take some effort to get online. Now any dipshit can do it.

77 comments