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  <title>Digital Hell</title>
  <link>https://digitalhell.net/</link>
  <description>Where the internet comes to confess.</description>
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  <lastBuildDate>Tue, 07 Jul 2026 08:09:50 GMT</lastBuildDate>
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    <title>Your Forgotten Subscriptions Have Grown Up and They Want to Talk</title>
    <link>https://digitalhell.net/forgotten-subscriptions-autopay-graveyard-abandoned-selves/</link>
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    <description>Somewhere in your bank statement, a meditation app you downloaded during a 2021 breakdown is quietly celebrating its third anniversary with your money. You weren&#039;t invited. You never are.</description>
    <author>Digital Hell</author>
    <category>Digital Dystopia</category>
    <pubDate>Tue, 07 Jul 2026 08:01:47 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>That Search You Made at 2 AM in 2019 Is Still Running the Show</title>
    <link>https://digitalhell.net/search-history-recommendation-engine-shame-profile/</link>
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    <description>Every panicked Google spiral, every &#039;is this normal&#039; query you typed and immediately regretted — the algorithm saved all of it. Your most embarrassing moments of curiosity didn&#039;t disappear when you closed the tab. They became the blueprint.</description>
    <author>Digital Hell</author>
    <category>Digital Dystopia</category>
    <pubDate>Tue, 07 Jul 2026 04:01:47 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>Congratulations on Your Breakup. The Algorithm Will Now Spend Six Months Rubbing It In.</title>
    <link>https://digitalhell.net/algorithm-keeps-serving-you-your-ex/</link>
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    <description>You did everything the self-help threads told you to do — you unfollowed, you blocked, you maybe even deleted the photos. But the algorithm wasn&#039;t listening, and it absolutely does not care that you&#039;re trying to move on. Turns out the digital infrastructure of a relationship has a longer half-life than the relationship itself.</description>
    <author>Digital Hell</author>
    <category>Digital Dystopia</category>
    <pubDate>Tue, 07 Jul 2026 00:02:39 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>Your Hard Drive Remembers Every Version of You That You Tried to Delete</title>
    <link>https://digitalhell.net/your-hard-drive-remembers-every-version-of-you/</link>
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    <description>Somewhere on an old laptop you haven&#039;t charged in three years, there&#039;s a folder called &#039;Final_Final_REAL_v3&#039; that contains more honest autobiography than anything you&#039;ve ever posted online. Your devices didn&#039;t just store your files — they archived your entire becoming, one panicked save-as at a time.</description>
    <author>Digital Hell</author>
    <category>Digital Dystopia</category>
    <pubDate>Mon, 06 Jul 2026 20:01:42 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>Duo Knows Where You Live: How a Cartoon Owl Turned Self-Improvement Into a Hostage Situation</title>
    <link>https://digitalhell.net/duo-knows-where-you-live-cartoon-owl-gamification-anxiety/</link>
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    <description>You downloaded Duolingo to learn Spanish. Now you&#039;re doing a five-minute lesson at 11:47 PM in a Walgreens parking lot because you cannot — will not — let that streak die. This is not motivation. This is something else entirely.</description>
    <author>Digital Hell</author>
    <category>Digital Dystopia</category>
    <pubDate>Mon, 06 Jul 2026 16:01:47 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>You Hit Mute. The Algorithm Didn&#039;t.</title>
    <link>https://digitalhell.net/you-hit-mute-the-algorithm-didnt/</link>
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    <description>Blocking and muting were supposed to be your escape hatch — a clean break from the people who drain you, stress you out, or just plain hurt. But the platforms you&#039;re trusting to hold that boundary? They have absolutely no interest in keeping it. The ghost you buried on Tuesday has a pretty good shot at showing up in your feed by Friday.</description>
    <author>Digital Hell</author>
    <category>Digital Dystopia</category>
    <pubDate>Mon, 06 Jul 2026 04:01:43 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>The Web Archived Your Worst Self and Filed Your Growth Under &#039;Not Found&#039;</title>
    <link>https://digitalhell.net/web-archived-worst-self-growth-not-found/</link>
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    <description>The internet has a long memory for your embarrassing phases and a goldfish brain for everything you did to fix them. Here&#039;s why the architecture of online shame is built to last — and redemption is built to rot.</description>
    <author>Digital Hell</author>
    <category>Digital Dystopia</category>
    <pubDate>Mon, 06 Jul 2026 00:02:34 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>Every Month You Don&#039;t Check, Something Is Quietly Eating Your Bank Account Alive</title>
    <link>https://digitalhell.net/forgotten-subscriptions-bleeding-your-bank-account-dry/</link>
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    <description>You signed up for a free trial in 2021 and haven&#039;t thought about it since. Somewhere right now, a charge is processing. This is the story of how Silicon Valley turned convenience into a slow-motion financial hemorrhage — and why it was never an accident.</description>
    <author>Digital Hell</author>
    <category>Digital Dystopia</category>
    <pubDate>Sun, 05 Jul 2026 20:01:55 GMT</pubDate>
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  <item>
    <title>Guilty Until Proven Irrelevant: How the Internet Convicts People and Then Forgets to Apologize</title>
    <link>https://digitalhell.net/guilty-until-proven-irrelevant-internet-convicts-people-forgets-to-apologize/</link>
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    <description>The viral callout post gets ten thousand shares. The correction gets forty-seven. This is not a bug in how outrage culture operates online — it&#039;s the whole point. We built a justice system with no appeals court, no burden of proof, and a memory that only runs in one direction.</description>
    <author>Digital Hell</author>
    <category>Digital Dystopia</category>
    <pubDate>Sun, 05 Jul 2026 08:02:32 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>Somebody Has to Watch the Darkness So You Can Sleep</title>
    <link>https://digitalhell.net/human-content-moderators-overnight-psychological-toll/</link>
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    <description>While you&#039;re doom-scrolling through a curated, relatively safe feed, someone on the other side of the world — or across town — is watching the stuff that never makes it to your screen. Content moderation is one of the most psychologically brutal jobs in tech, and the overnight shift is its own special circle of hell.</description>
    <author>Digital Hell</author>
    <category>Digital Dystopia</category>
    <pubDate>Sun, 05 Jul 2026 04:03:10 GMT</pubDate>
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  <item>
    <title>Ghost in the Cache: The Psychological Weight of Being Haunted by Your Own Digital Past</title>
    <link>https://digitalhell.net/ghost-in-the-cache-haunted-by-digital-past/</link>
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    <description>Somewhere on a server you&#039;ll never locate, a version of you is still posting. Still cringing. Still wrong about everything. The internet didn&#039;t just archive your worst year — it laminated it, indexed it, and made it searchable forever.</description>
    <author>Digital Hell</author>
    <category>Digital Dystopia</category>
    <pubDate>Sun, 05 Jul 2026 00:02:34 GMT</pubDate>
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  <item>
    <title>Still Posting in an Empty Room: The Haunting Loneliness of Being the Last One Left in a Dead Facebook Group</title>
    <link>https://digitalhell.net/last-person-alive-dead-facebook-group/</link>
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    <description>Somewhere right now, someone is posting a meme into a Facebook group where nobody has commented in eight months. They know nobody will respond. They post anyway. This is what it feels like to haunt your own community.</description>
    <author>Digital Hell</author>
    <category>Digital Dystopia</category>
    <pubDate>Sat, 04 Jul 2026 16:03:01 GMT</pubDate>
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  <item>
    <title>You Didn&#039;t Sign Up for This: The Ugly Truth About What Happens to Your Data When a Startup Dies</title>
    <link>https://digitalhell.net/what-happens-to-your-data-when-a-startup-goes-bankrupt/</link>
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    <description>When a tech company folds, your personal data doesn&#039;t get a funeral — it gets a fire sale. The intimate details you handed over in good faith become assets on a bankruptcy liquidation spreadsheet, sold to whoever shows up with the highest bid.</description>
    <author>Digital Hell</author>
    <category>Digital Dystopia</category>
    <pubDate>Sat, 04 Jul 2026 12:03:17 GMT</pubDate>
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  <item>
    <title>You&#039;ll Die Someday. Your Instagram Won&#039;t.</title>
    <link>https://digitalhell.net/youll-die-someday-your-instagram-wont/</link>
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    <description>The internet was engineered for growth, engagement, and eternal uptime — not for the inconvenient reality that its users are mortal. Your accounts will outlive you, your data will drift through server farms long after the funeral, and somewhere out there, an algorithm will cheerfully remind your grieving mother that today is your birthday.</description>
    <author>Digital Hell</author>
    <category>Digital Dystopia</category>
    <pubDate>Sat, 04 Jul 2026 08:02:33 GMT</pubDate>
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  <item>
    <title>Someone Has to Watch the Worst of Us So You Don&#039;t Have to</title>
    <link>https://digitalhell.net/someone-has-to-watch-the-worst-of-us/</link>
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    <description>Behind every clean, scrollable feed is a human being absorbing content that would make most people physically sick. The mental health crisis tearing through content moderation and trust-and-safety teams is Silicon Valley&#039;s most carefully buried secret — and the NDAs make sure it stays that way.</description>
    <author>Digital Hell</author>
    <category>Digital Dystopia</category>
    <pubDate>Sat, 04 Jul 2026 00:01:47 GMT</pubDate>
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  <item>
    <title>The App Shows You the Carrot. It Hides the Treadmill.</title>
    <link>https://digitalhell.net/gig-economy-apps-hidden-math-doordash-uber-workers/</link>
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    <description>DoorDash, Uber, and their cousins have perfected the art of showing you exactly enough money to keep you driving — and hiding exactly enough to keep you broke. We talked to the workers who finally did the math themselves, and what they found should make you furious.</description>
    <author>Digital Hell</author>
    <category>Digital Dystopia</category>
    <pubDate>Fri, 03 Jul 2026 20:02:31 GMT</pubDate>
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  <item>
    <title>3 AM on X Is a Different Country and Nobody Has a Passport</title>
    <link>https://digitalhell.net/3am-x-twitter-parallel-universe-night-culture/</link>
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    <description>Between 2 and 5 AM, X transforms into something the daylight crowd would barely recognize — a shadow platform running on grief, insomnia, and the specific courage that comes from believing nobody important is watching. What lives in that window reveals more about American loneliness than any think piece ever written in business hours.</description>
    <author>Digital Hell</author>
    <category>Digital Dystopia</category>
    <pubDate>Fri, 03 Jul 2026 12:00:59 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>After Midnight, the Internet Gets Honest</title>
    <link>https://digitalhell.net/after-midnight-internet-gets-honest/</link>
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    <description>Between midnight and dawn, a completely different internet emerges — one built by insomniacs, night-shift workers, and people the daytime web forgot. It&#039;s rawer, stranger, and somehow more real than anything that gets posted in the light of day. Welcome to the graveyard shift of the digital world.</description>
    <author>Digital Hell</author>
    <category>Digital Dystopia</category>
    <pubDate>Fri, 03 Jul 2026 08:01:53 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>They Stole the Slot Machine Playbook and Put It in Your Pocket</title>
    <link>https://digitalhell.net/slot-machine-playbook-infinite-scroll-psychology/</link>
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    <description>Infinite scroll, autoplay, and variable reward loops weren&#039;t happy accidents of good design — they were lifted straight from casino psychology and engineered to colonize your attention. Former Silicon Valley insiders have been sounding the alarm for years. So why are you still doomscrolling at 2am?</description>
    <author>Digital Hell</author>
    <category>Digital Dystopia</category>
    <pubDate>Fri, 03 Jul 2026 04:02:30 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>You Can Check Out Any Time You Like, But You Can Never Leave: The Impossible Art of Quitting the Internet</title>
    <link>https://digitalhell.net/impossible-art-of-quitting-the-internet-unsubscribe-purgatory/</link>
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    <description>Somewhere between your fourteenth &#039;confirm unsubscribe&#039; click and the email you receive three days later welcoming you back, you start to understand the truth: the internet was never designed to let you go. Opting out isn&#039;t a feature — it&#039;s a trap door that opens onto another trap door. Welcome to the unsubscribe labyrinth, population: all of us.</description>
    <author>Digital Hell</author>
    <category>Digital Dystopia</category>
    <pubDate>Thu, 02 Jul 2026 20:02:32 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>Meet Your Invisible Roommate: The Algorithm That Decided Who You Are Now</title>
    <link>https://digitalhell.net/invisible-roommate-algorithm-rewired-your-taste/</link>
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    <description>You didn&#039;t choose to spend three hours watching conspiracy-adjacent finance bros or develop a weirdly specific obsession with Norwegian black metal. The algorithm did that for you, and it didn&#039;t even ask. Welcome to the roommate situation from hell — one you can&#039;t evict, can&#039;t reason with, and definitely can&#039;t split utilities with.</description>
    <author>Digital Hell</author>
    <category>Digital Dystopia</category>
    <pubDate>Thu, 02 Jul 2026 04:03:37 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>Welcome to the Haunted Web: A Ghost Tour Through the Internet&#039;s Most Beloved Dead Zones</title>
    <link>https://digitalhell.net/haunted-web-ghost-tour-dead-websites/</link>
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    <description>GeoCities is gone. Vine is gone. Google+ is so gone it&#039;s almost funny. And yet somehow, none of them are really dead. Pull up a lawn chair and let us walk you through the internet&#039;s most persistent ghost towns — and why Americans keep leaving the lights on for them.</description>
    <author>Digital Hell</author>
    <category>Digital Dystopia</category>
    <pubDate>Wed, 01 Jul 2026 20:01:53 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>Your Favorite App Didn&#039;t Die — It Was Slowly Bled Out</title>
    <link>https://digitalhell.net/enshittification-how-apps-become-traps/</link>
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    <description>There&#039;s a word for what happened to Reddit, Twitter, and Amazon — and it&#039;s exactly as ugly as it sounds. Cory Doctorow called it &#039;enshittification,&#039; and once you see the pattern, you can&#039;t unsee it. Every platform you love is already on the clock.</description>
    <author>Digital Hell</author>
    <category>Digital Dystopia</category>
    <pubDate>Wed, 01 Jul 2026 12:02:51 GMT</pubDate>
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