Coffee perhaps. I think previous generations were more apt to just get a tub of Folgers or Maxwell House and not care too much about what they were drinking. Then third wave coffee shops started emphasizing quality, process, and flavor nuances. These days, you can find specialty coffee in most areas or get high-quality beans delivered and brew it yourself.
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I got a nice local shop which was part of a chain but the manager bought out the location and has been doing pretty well.
academic publishing. It used to be monopolized by a couple publishing company with unreasonably high fee for access on both the side of researcher and reader.
Now, though hard works of the academics and funding from the public, now many publishing company are non-profit governed by working academics. And in many fields, open access has be come the default.
Beer?
In the beginning was European beer, and it was good. They created the American brewing industry and it was ok. Then they said “let there be swill” and that’s all we knew. Now the earth was formless and empty, darkness was over the surface of the deep.
Then Jimmy Carter said, "Let us make breweries in our image, in our likeness, so that they may rule over the drinkers in the sea and the imbibers in the sky, over the livestock and all the wild party animals, and over all the pedestrians that move along the ground. And there was beer
Jimmy Carter saw all that he had made, and it was very good.
But all you fucking export is over hopped swill and fucking Brooklyn Amber lager!
Amen, brother.
I'd say American car companies. Due to market consolidation and car brands being a symbol of national pride, they were able to enshitify in the 1970's and 80's, producing low-quality expensive cars. Competition from Japan in the late 80's and 90's forced them to improve. American cars still trail behind Japanese cars in quality, but they've gotten much better.
Free and fair competition is essential to any economy. The gutting of antitrust laws in the USA is partly to blame for whatever you call this system we have now (I can't confidently say it's capitalism anymore).
I agree with you. Ford still sucks though. if only for the awful interiors.
Japanese cars are currently in a state of industrial shittiness. If the US is still trailing them, there is no hope for the US car industry.
Very briefly, after the CEO of United Health was killed, insurance companies were accepting claims they otherwise would have rejected.
And some of those were literally life-saving claims.
Luigi saved more lives than he (allegedly) ended.
Welp, gotta kill another then.
Don't do that. Don't give me hope.
I went to pick up a prescription the next morning. It was mysteriously free.
Fuckin awesome
In some ways shrinkflation is "cyclical" in that inflation rises costs, companies try to cheat consumers by shrinking products, but wages go up and "premium" products launch that are a decent quantity again. Those do well, but then inflation hits again, they shittify and shrinkflation happens again.
The long standing "big" brands never recover, but new stuff does come along. Good example is the "premium" chocolate bars that come along, their selling point being they had more cocoa in them. The established mass market brands used to have cocoa in them, but reduced the proportion to save costs. Now some of those "premium" brands have reduced the cocoa content and new even more expensive chocolate brands are available.
Fun fact: most American chocolates cannot be called chocolate in the EU because they don't contain enough cocoa.
Equally though many European chocolates can't be called chocolate in the US because they have too much vegetable or seed oil in as a ratio to cocoa butter.
Enshittification happens in both places, they just toe the line of the rules in each.
That's mainly the British ones, to be fair. Brits developed a taste for vegetable oil during the war, and we're nothing if not nostalgic.
Huh. I had no idea.
More British than European typically.
Video games
Had a huge crash around the Atari era due to an overwhelming amount of shovelware being published. Games were also extremely expensive then
Nintendo famously reversed this crisis with the introduction of the NES and their “Nintendo seal of quality”. Consumers were able to access a curated collection of quality games, and it really turned things around and basically launched the modern gaming industry
Steam, too. It was originally unpopular DRM for Half-Life 2. It had a broken offline mode that could only be selected when already online. It had no meaningful customer service and people permanently lost their accounts with no avenue for appeal (and probably no human even involved).
It was originally unpopular DRM and a launcher for Counterstrike. I think Valve was trying to take a page out of Battle.net's book. The Half Life 2 thing came afterwards, and if it weren't for that Steam probably would have just been yet another failed footnote in gaming history.
I got curious and did a bit of searching since I couldn't really think of anything. Apparently Fender (guitars) was originally amazing, was sold to another company and really degraded in overall quality, and then was purchased back by some of its engineers and returned to a better quality. Pretty nice to see that people who were actually passionate about something regaining control and saving something they loved.
https://www.soundunlimited.co.uk/blogs/articles/fender_timeline
They then proceeded to not innovate at all for a couple decades and now they're serving cease and desists to any builders making guitars remotely similar to the Stratocaster with demands to recall and destroy sold guitars.
Fender is dogshit ass like Gibson. Both companies have behaved like entitled nepo-babies for decades. These companies deserve to die as punishment for their hubris.
Ironically, they are now sending cease-and-desist letters to guitar manufacturers that build guitars with the s-style that their stratocasters have, and they are public enemy number one in the guitar community right now.
https://www.guitarworld.com/gear/electric-guitars/fender-cease-and-desist-lsl-instruments
Sadly though with the recent cease and desist stuff they've been involved with it seems like they've turned scummy.
Shrinkflation is not really related to enshittification. It's a symptom of inflation, which has been severe, and real wage growth not keeping up.
Is RAM being enshittified or just demand driving up prices? (Like lack of supply is driving up fuel prices)
Either way inflation and real wage growth comes and goes in cycles. Usually in an upward spiral. We're living through harder times right now, but I'm cautiously optimistic for the world as a whole.
Bowling Alleys, at least some of the ones I've seen lately. There was a period in the late 00s where bowling alleys thought they were the shit and started charging upwards of $20/player/lane, plus $30+ dollar pizzas. Not to mention the arcade jumping from quarters to dollar-credits.
The last couple I've found have all but dropped that, basically back down to the $15/lane/2 hour model with however many players and complimentary shoe rental. One even had $5 personal pizzas (that yes were just Totinos or similar heated up, but hey it's better than $30 for a red baron).
I guess the ones that survived covid realized no one was willing to spend a nice dinner's worth of cash on a night at what should be the second cheapest type of third space available to people.
There was an article on here about some sort of antitrust suit against Bowlero just a few days ago, with a bunch of people in the comments complaining that bowlibg is more enshittified now than ever before.
I would love $15/lane/2 hours. Bowling here is $285 for a lane for 2 hours
Shit, good thing I suck at bowling
Video games... Once. They enshittified in the late 70s, and then unenshittified in the 80s with Nintendo's Seal of Approval. Unfortunately, they also re-enshittified again after the 2000s.
Not exactly, but Runescape3 went hard into microtransactions (which arguably generated the revenue needed so they didn't need to be implemented in OSRS) but they did a pivot abd are rolling back microtransactions, removing gambling loot boxes in some cases and leaving things as direct purchase, etc
https://secure.runescape.com/m=news/the-future-of-mtx-our-approach--your-involvement
They've even gone as far as to launch cosmetic free worlds so mtx cosmetics are disabled. Which I, for one, have always enjoyed the visual progression of gear in games, getting cooler gear as you get more powerful and knowing of the really cool items which are hard to get.
https://secure.runescape.com/m=news/mtx-experiment-cosmetic-free-worlds-live-now
Apple products. They were considered junk until Jobs came back and revived their style. They are currently in the round 2 of the enshitification process.
It was that interval after they'd merged with NeXT but before iOS became a thing.
Jobs and the ipod started the entire enshittification paradigm.
Don't @ me.
Yeah, you're right, we're in round 3.
Cash. Currency exchange. Used to be a tourist trap, intransparent and bad rates, commission on top; take only mint banknotes. Now often we see: No commission, rates with low spread (same as the best bank rates available to consumers). Takes bank notes and coins at no surcharge, no discussion.
This is for countries where cash is still king and practically required. It's competition at work; there are multiple local shops and they advertise their rates publicly. With internet in everyone's pocket, there's little room for cheating. Just enough spread for this to be a profitable business without robbing the customer.
Compare to ATM operators, which are usually a oligopoly charging growing fees to foreigners. Because they can.
Waterstones was on the brink of collapse, until a Russian billionaire bought the chain and put James Daunt in charge.
Daunt reversed years of enshittification. Publishers couldn't buy shelf space for their books anymore, local managers were given autonomy on what books they wanted to stock and each branch was run like its own individual book shop.
And to the surprise of the business world, his plan worked.
Barnes and Noble is another book store example that's following a similar arc. They were on a severe downward trend for years, but new leadership let each store set its own content and suddenly they opening stores instead of closing them.
B&N is a weird example too because they have a publishing house, which saved them from the fate of Borders who had to rely entirely on moving products without a fallback.