This essay examines the structural transition from the open web to a fragmented, semi‑private digital ecosystem shaped by confidential governance mechanisms, infrastructural decay, and platform consolidation. As states expand the use of sealed directives and non‑public orders targeting infrastructure providers, opacity becomes a mode of governance rather than an exception. In parallel, the collapse of third‑party tracking erodes the economic foundations of the open web, accelerating the migration toward newsletters, federated protocols, dark‑social networks, and other small‑web environments. The paper argues that visibility in the post‑web era is no longer determined by search engines or public feeds but by coherence, identity stability, archive durability, and portability across surfaces. It situates these developments within broader debates in infrastructure studies and digital governance, showing how epistemic survival increasingly depends on dense, portable archives and high‑signal communities rather than reach. The essay provides a framework for understanding how authorship and knowledge circulation adapt as the mechanisms of control and discovery move out of public view. Keywords:digital governance; confidentiality orders; open web decline; small web; platform consolidation; epistemic survival; infrastructure studies; visibility economy; dark social; post‑web era
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Signal Rupture (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6996a7efecb39a600b3ee140 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18653298
Signal Rupture
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