 So Josh Wardle made a word game for his partner because she wanted to be able to play this word game every day and At an architectural level it is radical because it is simple and it is a throwback to an internet that Many people have forgotten about what happened after that was the glitch community took the idea and ran with it They made remixes and so people have made I mean the last count was well over a thousand remixes of Wardle on glitch And that's sort of branched off into all these different worlds now What's been most amazing for me to see the majority of remixes we've seen on glitch have been From kpop fans So we have a huge community of mostly teenage girls who love kpop you know Korean pop music which is global pop music now And so that's pretty remarkable that we have on an average afternoon a handful of new apps made by Young women will pop up about the groups they like and then people play if they share their scores You know the key takeaway here is pop culture tied directly to broad individual creation of independent websites that all run on their own Addresses created by individual people with no surveillance no tracking no connection to any of the big silos Complete open source the ability to take it and actually run it somewhere else the web that we are told we are fighting for exists every day And millions of people are participating in it