this post was submitted on 22 Feb 2026
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I agree - mostly. But...things online are RADICALLY different now, vs late 90s / early 2000s.
I've outlined some of my media and tech curation for my kids above; I would LOVE for them to stumble across stuff like we did. Hell, in time, I'd even let them grok the edgier stuff (yes, like you, I was there 3000 years ago. I know of the old magics)
But that internet is long gone...or if not...severely booby trapped. The competence required of (say) a curious 8yr old in 2026 vs 2002 to navigate the online landscape and NOT encounter those booby traps (I feel) is several orders of magnitude higher.
I don't think we can just park our kids in front of the 486 and say "here's Encarta; have at it. Then I'll show you this cool thing called a BBS".
Kinda sucks.
Still, there are useful funnels / curation pathways. You CAN recreate that experience for your kids...but it's no longer "are you winning, son?" set it and forget it meme. Now it's "Daddy needs to be a part time sysadmin and know what's what, so some pedo doesn't catfish you for feet pics via ROBLOX".