I don’t disagree with you, but I think the web was far better for learning a decade ago than it is now. Now I have to wade through paywalls, clickbait farms, SEO scams, useless auto-generated articles, etc…
Some specific examples: When looking up resources on high school level mathematics, it appears that fully half of the content is paywalled. Often this paywalled content isn’t particularly valuable in the first place (eg, hiding a basic multiplication chart behind a paywall)
And a more technical example: when I was learning the Angular framework, damn near all the results on Google were SEO scams. It was content masquerading as tutorials, but when you reach the end (often after investing significant time), they try to extract money from you to read the rest of the guide.
It’s gotten to the point where I’d be willing to pay money to filter out all the garbage from the web.
Some specific examples: When looking up resources on high school level mathematics, it appears that fully half of the content is paywalled. Often this paywalled content isn’t particularly valuable in the first place (eg, hiding a basic multiplication chart behind a paywall)
And a more technical example: when I was learning the Angular framework, damn near all the results on Google were SEO scams. It was content masquerading as tutorials, but when you reach the end (often after investing significant time), they try to extract money from you to read the rest of the guide.
It’s gotten to the point where I’d be willing to pay money to filter out all the garbage from the web.