The World Becomes a Web
For most of human history, your world was roughly the size of your reach. You knew the people you could walk to, passed news along to whoever was nearby, and relied on physical presence to keep relationships alive. Even after the telephone came along, the circle stayed manageable — one voice at a time, one conversation that ended when you hung up.
Then, in the early 2000s, platforms started showing up that did something entirely new. They didn't just pass your message on from one point to another — they put you, your thoughts, your photos, your opinions, into a shared space where anyone could tune in, follow you, and talk back. The audience was no longer a crowd in a square. It was everyone, all at once.
The web that had once linked up computers now began linking up lives. Connections that would have faded out with distance instead carried on in a new, borderless form. And the world, for better and for worse, would never quite fit back into its old size again.