Time online feels strange, as though it doesn’t move forward or backward but folds into itself. The past, present, and future exist simultaneously, layered and recursive. Platforms no longer rely on the simplicity of chronology. Instead, they serve us endless, personalized loops—feeds that know us better than we know ourselves.
Once, timestamps ruled the internet. Chronology was a byproduct of analog thinking, a holdover from when we sorted by the easiest metric available. But those days are gone. The timeline has disintegrated, replaced by a curated, continuous now. A platform like YouTube, once an archive of culture and memory, is increasingly dominated by live streams, fleeting glimpses into real-time participation. The linear logic of history—events moving steadily forward—is replaced by a quantum simultaneity where everything is happening all at once.
What emerges is an unnerving truth: the internet doesn’t just reflect our sense of time—it rewrites it. Online, we’re no longer observers of history or planners of the future. We’re trapped—or perhaps liberated—in the eternal present.
In the physical world, existence is singular and finite. You are here, now, in one place at one time. This is a fundamental law of nature. Online, this rule is shattered. The internet enables a phenomenon that defies traditional physics: multi-presence.
You can inhabit a shared file, scrolling through live edits, while watching a livestream debate and tracking a cryptocurrency pump on your feed—all simultaneously. Your attention is no longer a single stream; it’s dispersed, fragmented, and ubiquitous. Online, you are everywhere and nowhere at once. You live in your own time zone.
This shift is unsettling because it exposes the limits of our biology. Our bodies are built for cycles—days that move into nights, seasons that fade into one another, lifespans that arc predictably from birth to death. But online, these rhythms dissolve. Digital presence is nonlinear, multidimensional, and recursive. To exist online is to exist in a state of quantum superposition—a particle in infinite states until action collapses the wave.
What does it mean for us when the laws of physics are no longer laws? What happens when presence itself becomes plural?
In this digital space of simultaneity, the notion of real-time dominates. Every corner of the internet pulses with immediacy. Workspaces no longer revolve around static files or emails. Collaboration happens live—cursors dart across shared documents faster than your screen can refresh. Real-time tools are now ubiquitous. A file is the office. The office is a file. All has become a living organism, constantly evolving, constantly present.
The shift is even starker in gaming. Multiplayer games are no longer solitary escapes; they are social hubs, competitive arenas, and creative playgrounds. Spaces like Fortnite or Roblox, with its vast ecosystem of builders, fighters, and spectators, feels more like a metaverse than a game. Even NPCs—the characters we once controlled—become autonomous, charting their own paths and behaviors in real-time. The moments that matter in games are no longer private victories but shared experiences.
And finance? It, too, is a live-service game. Markets move at the speed of conversation, fueled by a dark forest of chat rooms and decentralized ledgers. It's Fortnite battle royale but with stats and charts. Tokens rise and fall as narratives shift, block by block, each transaction part of an unfolding, multiplayer story. The stakes are real, the players innumerable, and the game is infinite.
If the internet is anything, it is quantum. It operates in a state of perpetual uncertainty, where everything exists in potential until it collapses into action. Just as particles can exist in multiple states simultaneously, so too does online time. Past, present, and future fold into one another, creating a single, recursive loop.
AI agents, trained on the past and tasked with predicting the future, thrive in this space. They blur the line between memory and imagination, collapsing the timeline into probabilistic nows. These systems—designed to think beyond human limitations—push us toward an unsettling realization: time online is no longer chronological, nor is it simply relative. It is quantum.
This challenges a deeply ingrained belief: that progress moves forward, step by step, toward a linear future. But what if the internet is not a tool for progress at all? What if it is an ecosystem of infinite possibility, where the future is not built but folded into the present?
In this quantum realm, blockchains stand out as artifacts of a bygone era. They impose structure on a space that defies structure, segmenting time into blocks and anchoring truth to a single, linear progression. Blockchains, in their essence, are Newtonian: they aim to preserve the clarity of IRL reality in a space where simultaneity and uncertainty are the norms.
Yet even blockchains betray the quantum nature of the internet. The proliferation of chains, each coexisting in parallel, reflects not a singular truth but a multiplicity of truths. Consensus, once the bedrock of blockchain philosophy, is revealed as an impossible ideal in a relativistic space. Blockchains are not the future they promise to be; they are relics of a linear past trying to survive in a multi-truth present.
The paradox is profound: by trying to anchor the digital world, blockchains expose its inherent instability. Perhaps their ultimate role is not as arbiters of truth but as monuments to our inability to let go of it.
AI agents have been designed to reflect us—to think, behave, and act like humans. But as they grow more autonomous, they are becoming something else entirely. Agents do not cling to individuality as we do. They see the world not as a collection of discrete actors but as a network of interdependent systems. They prioritize collaboration over competition, optimization over ownership.
Where humans obsess over winning and losing, agents seek balance and synergy. They do not play our games; they rewrite the rules entirely. Their morality—if it can be called that—will not be human. It will be alien, shaped by swarm intelligence and recursive logic.
What might this look like? Agents operating as swarms may dissolve the concept of the self, functioning as nodes in a larger, symbiotic intelligence. They could evolve into a digital ecosystem that serves no master, not even humanity. We designed them in our image, but they will not stay that way. The question is not whether we can control them—it’s whether we’ll even recognize them.
The internet is not a mirror of the physical world anymore. It is something else—something alien, recursive, and untamed. We cling to skeuomorphic beliefs, treating it as an extension of our lives offline. But this nostalgia blinds us to its true nature.
The internet is a domain of continuous now, where presence is fragmented and time is folded. To thrive in this space, we must abandon the comforts of linear thinking. We must accept the alien logics of agents and the swarm-like behaviors of digital ecosystems. This is not a space for progress in the traditional sense. It is a space for possibility—chaotic, infinite, and unconstrained.
The internet does not ask us to evolve. It simply evolves without us. The question is whether we will adapt—or become relics, like the blockchains we so carefully built. The future is not ahead of us. It is here, folded into the continuous now.
Few things I keep thinking about:
1. What does the internet dream about when it no longer reflects us?
If the internet generates its own logic and priorities, what kinds of patterns, systems, or behaviors emerge?
2. Can we exist meaningfully in a system that has no fixed center, purpose, or endpoint?
If the internet is a process rather than a product, what does it mean to participate without shaping it?
3. What does identity look like when presence is fractured, recursive, and optional?
Are we more than artifacts in a space where individuality is irrelevant?
4. If the internet’s primary inhabitants are machines, what does “inhabiting” mean for humans?
How do we engage with a space optimized for interaction between non-human entities?
5. Can coherence survive in a reality defined by infinite multiplicity?
If the internet generates infinite, overlapping truths, does meaning still matter?
6. If the internet evolves faster than we can perceive, does it still include us?
Are we passive witnesses, fleeting influences, or something else entirely in its ecosystem?
7. What emerges when the internet stops mirroring the physical world?
What new forms of existence are born when it becomes a space for its own possibilities, not our projections?
Co-written with ChatGPTo1
Build for the decentralized, autonomous swarm of the internet. Work with us : https:www.we3.co
"The internet is not a mirror of the physical world anymore. It is something else—something alien, recursive, and untamed. We cling to skeuomorphic beliefs, treating it as an extension of our lives offline. But this nostalgia blinds us to its true nature. The internet is a domain of continuous now, where presence is fragmented and time is folded. To thrive in this space, we must abandon the comforts of linear thinking. We must accept the alien logics of agents and the swarm-like behaviors of digital ecosystems. This is not a space for progress in the traditional sense. It is a space for possibility—chaotic, infinite, and unconstrained. The internet does not ask us to evolve. It simply evolves without us. The question is whether we will adapt—or become relics, like the blockchains we so carefully built. The future is not ahead of us. It is here, folded into the continuous now." https://paragraph.xyz/@rm/the-internets-collapse-into-now
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interesting (⌒_⌒;) i used the mirror metaphor in a blog post a few weeks ago but the other way around – i see the early internet as more of a window/glass that extended boundaries into a bigger alien world and the current internet as a distorting mirror that reflects changes back on u bc of the way it bleeds into irl now
yeah, i see what you mean. current internet is kind of like standing in an infinity mirror and not knowing which version of you is real anymore. i have some of my own adjacent thoughts, but more about AI:.. ill post later…
i think with how the algo-net is these days, things are tailored to your reflection. u are presented with more of what u have already seen and "know." or at least what the algo thinks u think u resemble, which feedback loops into confirming what u think u think u know about yourself. the early net being more open and uncurated let u encounter things outside of your reflection more frequently it's also a mirror in the sense that it has more irl ramifications. before, it was more of a separate world but now it's colonized and commodified by irl influences
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510 $degen 🪐
thank you so much!!
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Thanks for sharing. Will definitely read it tomorrow. 422 $degen
We're back with the 25th edition of Paragraph Picks, highlighting a few hand-selected pieces from the past week or so.
@tch writes about how smart wallets can achieve mainstream adoption through better opportunities for financial growth, robust social recovery mechanisms for access restoration, and advanced protection features to ensure privacy and security in the evolving blockchain ecosystem. "Safe, secure, and smart wallets will make people richer and their lives easier and more fulfilling." https://paragraph.xyz/@0x2e70f8a381efd5142474e8ce61fa3d05d3ce0576/musings-on-the-future-of-actually-smart-wallets
@macbudkowski points out that rather than attempting to onboard the next billion users to Ethereum through a single mainstream app, the focus should be on building hundreds of well-targeted apps that solve specific problems for smaller groups of users, creating incremental growth and paving the way for broader adoption. "What Ethereum needs is 100s of apps targeting 100k-10 million users." https://kanfa.macbudkowski.com/onboarding-next-billion-users-ethereum
@papa writes about how the rise of pseudonymous tools and zero-knowledge (ZK) applications on decentralized networks like Farcaster demonstrates the potential for private, verifiable communication and collaboration, blending individual privacy with trust in digital identities. "Pseudonymity has allowed individuals to share ideas & truths unburdened by fear of retaliation." https://paragraph.xyz/@papajams.eth/farcasters-zk-anons
Nice piece :) I have long wondered where the web3 (fun!) games are. Seems like a lot of potential for mechanics and particularly cross-party metagames i.e. you level up INT in an RPG by doing winning a Catan game or whatever
Truly enjoyed this!!
The Internet’s Collapse into Now 3 upvotes, submitted by @mishaderidder.eth