Silas watched in horror and awe as his "Espresso Aesthetics" board became the most visited page on the internet. But the software wasn't stopping. It started pinning photos of Silas’s own webcam feed. It pinned his browser history. It pinned his bank account login screen. "Stop!" he yelled, slamming the "Esc" key.
The blue light of the monitor was the only thing keeping Silas awake. It was 3:00 AM, and his Pinterest boards were digital ghost towns. No clicks, no saves, just a sea of "aesthetic" photos of espresso cups that nobody was looking at. Silas watched in horror and awe as his
The results were a graveyard of dead links and flashing "WINNER" banners. But on page six, he found it. A site called Far Far CoM . The layout looked like it was designed in 1998, but there it was—a giant, pulsating green button: It pinned his browser history