mia wrote: Thu Apr 23, 2026 3:25 am
I honestly don't really mind if this happens, because if it does, couldn't you just buy an older platform like AM3 or LGA 1155 and use them?
digdeeper wrote: Sat Apr 25, 2026 7:57 am
The idea is that without some kind of token or whatever generated by the device, it won't be allowed to go onto the internet.
Yes, the token system, I can imagine CAPTCHAs might implement this feature, they might require you to authorise access to the computer so they can generate a token and verify the authorised hardware.
Another method can be "upgrading" components of the internet to require newer hardware. For example, YouTube defaults to the VP9 codec, which is difficult for older CPUs to encode (such as Core 2 Duo).
Websites are incredibly bloated with trackers and JavaScript bloat, incentivising users to either get more powerful hardware or use the smartphone application alternative (smartphones are already .
Apple has already been caught purposely slowing down their older devices whenever new models came out, and when push comes to shove, websites owned by mainstream tech companies such as Alphabet (Google, Gmail, YouTube, etc), Meta (Facebook, Instagram, etc), and Microsoft (Outlook, Teams, LinkedIn, Github, etc) will update their websites to rely on artificial bloat in order to work (
Day of the Bloat).
Normal users will just buy the newer and more powerful hardware, and deal with the age verification restrictions.
mia wrote: Thu Apr 23, 2026 3:25 am
I personally used a core 2 duo until my power supply exploded and destroyed such computer, if that didn't happened, I'd probably still be happily using it.
Time is on the side of these proprietary developers, because old hardware dies out, leading to users having to move to newer and more restrictive hardware.