Show notes
Episode Notes
More of the internet may be automated than most people realize. But if the web is filling with bots, fake accounts, and AI-driven noise, what should replace the broken trust layer?
In this episode of The Weird Canadian, Cody talks with Richard Kersey about Chirpper, a proof-of-humanity social network built around human vouching, TrustChain reputation, and accountability without surveillance.
The conversation looks at the tension between online trust and privacy: why face scans and ID uploads are not a neutral solution, how bot farms shape narratives, what dead internet theory gets right or wrong, and whether reputation systems can reduce bad behaviour without handing power to a centralized identity gatekeeper.
They also discuss AI-assisted development, why AI may make experienced engineers more important, and what a portable proof-of-humanity system could look like over the next five years.
Guest / platform discussed:
Chirpper: https://chirpper.com
Source discussed for the bot-traffic claim:
Cloudflare bot/human web-traffic reporting via Search Engine Land: https://searchengineland.com/cloudflare-bots-webpage-requests-479608
The Weird Canadian:
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@The_Weird_Canadian
Website: https://theweirdcanadian.ca
Services: https://harbourflow.ca
Async affiliate link:
https://async.com/?ref=zjdlyzn
Disclosure: this is an affiliate link, which means Cody may earn a commission if you sign up through it.
Topics:
- Proof of humanity without ID
- Human verification without biometrics
- Dead internet theory
- Bot traffic and social media manipulation
- TrustChain reputation
- Accountability without surveillance
- AI-assisted software development
- The future of internet trust
Listen if you are interested in online privacy, AI, social platforms, digital identity, and whether we can prove people are human without making the internet feel like an airport security line.
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