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Maggie Appleton

The Dark Forest and Generative AI One Developer, Two Dozen Agents, Zero Alignment Gas Town’s Agent Patterns, Design Bottlenecks, and Vibecoding at Scale January 2026 | Maggie Appleton A Treatise on AI Chatbots Undermining the Enlightenment A Brief History & Ethos of the Digital Garden Vibe Code is Legacy Code May 2025 | Maggie Appleton Home-Cooked Software and Barefoot Developers Statistically, When Will My Baby Be Born? Speculative Calendar Events ChatGPT Would be a Decent Policy Advisor March 2025 | Maggie Appleton The Expanding Dark Forest and Generative AI Humanity's Last Exam Squish Meets Structure Common Misconceptions in AI Undetected AI Exam Answers Unbaited Smidgeons Growing a Human: The First 30 Weeks How to Import Academic Papers from Zotero into Tana December 2024 | Maggie Appleton Aesthetic Command Lines with Hyper, Spaceship, and Oh My Zsh Leaving Elicit July 2024 | Maggie Appleton A Short History of Bi-Directional Links The Pattern Language of Project Xanadu Assumed Audiences Ambient Co-presence On Opening Essays, Conference Talks, and Jam Jars Spinning Worlds, Seasickness, and Dealing with Vestibular Neuritis A Collection of Design Engineers Gathering Structures Daily Notes Pages Historical Trails December 2023 | Maggie Appleton September 2023 | Maggie Appleton Digital Gardening for Non-Technical Folks Language Model Sketchbook, or Why I Hate Chatbots June 2023 | Maggie Appleton Computational Notebooks Folk Interfaces Reverse Outlining with Language Models Command K Bars Spatial Web Browsing A Picture Worth a Thousand Programmes Programmable Notes Programming Portals Teenage Skeuomorphic Desktop Designs Growing the Evergreens Why You Own an iPad and Still Can't Draw A Brief Introduction to Digital Anthropology Transclusion and Transcopyright Dreams The Block-Paved Path to Structured Data Empty Pointers and Constellations of AI Metaphors We Web By The Gift Economy Epistemic Disclosure November 2022 | Maggie Appleton Joining Ought July 2022 | Maggie Appleton The Linear Oppression of Note-taking Apps Paleolithic Nostalgia Interoperable Personal Libraries and Ad Hoc Reading Groups The Finest Narrative Non-Fiction Essays Algorithmic Transparency October 2021 | Maggie Appleton Plebeian Programming with Keyboard Maestro The Cultural Anthropology of React August 2021 | Maggie Appleton Natureculture, Moral Purity, and Cultural Boundaries The Echo & Narcissus Writing Club Pink, Soft, Glittering Developers Fetishism & Mechanical Keyboards Making Programming Visual, Spatial, and Learnable Organic, Local, Artisan Data Storage Positioning Elements & Scrollytelling in CSS Painting Roam Research with Custom CSS A Digital Anthropology Reading List The Eponymous Laws of Programming A History of Cyborgs Neologisms GreenSock Animations with React Hooks The Bare Essentials of Greensock September 2020 | Maggie Appleton Illustrating Gatsby's Key Concepts Problematic Proteins New Harvest & Illustrating the Cultivated Meat Podcast Synecdoche: Drawing the Part for the Whole A Meta-Tour of This Site Douglas, Dirt, and Matter Out of Place The Knowledge Hydrant A Naïve Exploration of Computer-Supported Collaborative Learning Silent Synchronous Reading Sessions What the Fork is React Suspense? Visually Workshopping the AWS Cloud Are Data Unions the Future of Data? Pattern Languages in Programming and Interface Design A Metaphorical Reading Collection
The Dark Forest and the Cozy Web
Tracy Durnell · 2025-04-15 · via Maggie Appleton

The cozy web is Venkatesh Rao ’s term for the private, gatekeeper-bounded spaces of the internet we have all retreated to over the last few years.

It’s the “high-gatekeeping slum-like space comprising slacks, messaging apps, private groups, storage services like dropbox, and of course, email.” The informal, untracked, messily human space that the bots and algorithms haven’t infiltrated yet.

Venkat first proposed the term in one of his Breaking Smart emails on The Extended Internet Universe . He builds off Yancey Strickler’s companion idea of the Dark Forest theory of the web. The “dark forest” is a place that seems eerily quiet and devoid of life. All the living creatures within it are hiding. Because “night is when the predators come out. To survive, the animals stay silent.”

The predators here are the advertisers, tracking bots, clickbait creators, attention-hungry influencers, reply guys, and trolls. It’s unsafe to reveal yourself to them in any authentic way. So we retreat into private spaces. We hide in the cozy web.

“These are all spaces where depressurized conversation is possible because of their non-indexed, non-optimized, and non-gamified environments”

Yancey Strickler – The Dark Forest Theory of the Internet

Loving both of these notions, I felt compelled to bring them together into an illustrated diagram of our current social internet situation.


Layered diagram of the cozy web as a series of underground burrows beneath the dark forest

We create tiny underground burrows of Slack channels, Whatsapp groups, Discord chats, and Telegram streams that offer shelter and respite from the aggressively public nature of Facebook, Twitter, and every recruiter looking to connect on LinkedIn.

It’s the digital realm of Domestic Cozy Gen-Z vibes. Casual, comfy, and not trying to kick up a fuss.

The cozy web works on “(human) protocol of everybody cutting-and-pasting bits of text, images, URLs, and screenshots across live streams”, hopefully one day evolving “from cut-and-paste to a personal blockchain of context-permissioned, addressable, searchable, interlinked clips” as Venkat puts it.

It’s since become a standard part of the Venkat Vocabulary for fellow Ribbonfarmers and Yaks, and remains one of my favourite Neologisms

Neologisms

A collection of interesting words that have recently been coined of this year.