While the internet archives vast amounts of information, the speed at which this information is consumed and discarded creates a sense of temporal compression. The past feels distant, and the future never seems to arrive. This is akin to Bernard Stiegler’s work on technics and time, which argues that technology fundamentally shapes our perception of time and memory, creating new forms of temporal experience. In the digital age, the internet acts as a time machine compressing the past, present, and future into a single, continuous stream. This compression disrupts notions of historical continuity while emerging a fragmented, nonlinear experience of time.