On internet fatigue
cataloguing the worst of the online
// updated 2025-09-09 18:51
On this page, let's list the most hysterical habits on the internet which cause internet fatigue to many:
General misuse of everything
Yes indeed:
- using uppercase letters excessively
- Like A New York Times Headline
- low-resolution memes
- not everyone went to school for graphic design but some memes look like pixelated faces in a crime scene
- asking straightforward questions on social media
- they can easily go to a search engine where they could get the answer
- in a shorter amount of time
- with a higher degree of reliability
- instead, they typically pose the question in a comments section and want to get the answer
- hours later
- from "some guy"
- they can easily go to a search engine where they could get the answer
Instagram snobbery
- those who like a bunch of posts but will not follow
- when someone likes a post or two but does not follow - that's OK
- they probably found that post from someone sharing it
- but when someone likes 10+ posts and does not follow - that's not OK
- they purposefully went into the profile and liked it all but did not want to commit
- when someone likes a post or two but does not follow - that's OK
- those who follow but never like a post or story
- "bonus negative points" if they asked "in real life" to follow you
- if they don't lurk in the stories, then they might get a pass
- if they do lurk in the stories, then they have certainly hate followed you
Microbloggers
Whether Bluesky, Threads, X, Gab, Truth Social or some similar app where people share one-line text posts:
- those who "quote post" another person's post with nothing to add
- their quote post gets all the views with which they can monetize themselves
- usually they might add a single emoji or "hahahahaha" or some similar lazy feedback
YouTube channels
We've all seen or heard the:
- "please like and subscribe"
- like it isn't already obvious
- imagine asking "please like and follow" on every post on (any other social network)
- this actually makes me not want to like the video, let alone subscribe
- "selfie cam travel vloggers"
- who "show face more than place"
- "government channels with comments disabled"
- so much for "democracy"
YouTube (and most internet) comments
We've all seen the:
- "first post"er who will quickly get buried
- "contrarian" who wants to rip the video (or post) apart
- (usually based on some insignificant trivial detail)
- "nationalists" who think their country beats everyone else's and/or does better at (thing) than all the others
- "personal anecdote" person who will reminisce about their past
- (get a blog, pal!)
- "off-topic" dude who will talk about something vaguely related to the video
- "self-promoter" who will name-drop themselves as someone else
- "who's still watching this in (current year)" as though things aren't meant to be timeless and forever
- "question asker" who would get their answers quicker if they just ran it through a search engine
- "bland single word" (e.g. "cool") or "single basic emoji" (e.g. 😍) replier who adds zero spice to the conversation
- "non-sequitur 'get rich quick' spam" post
- the "i'm bored, talk to me" (usually a "youth")