
When the internet was in its infancy, it seemed perfect. You could connect with friends. Learn new information. Make weird dolls on Angelcity-hosted pages. But then, like all sweet things left out in the sun, it started to rot.
The new information became overwhelming. The connection with friends turned into cold emails from brands you've never heard of. And the dolls have been buried along with our optimism.
Now it’s just an endless avalanche of noise. Our emails are packed with newsletters we don’t want. The notification pings interrupt our limited chats with friends. And our data is being sold like it’s on clearance at Target.
When we started
Now that we’ve helped over 4000 people make their lives on the internet less annoying, we dug into the numbers to expose the issue (and point out how to fit back).
If you've ever looked at the onslaught of random newsletters you get in your inbox, you’re not alone. You already know that companies spend tons of money to spam our inboxes with the hopes that we might purchase their product. But people only open 1 in 4 newsletters they receive. And they receive a lot:
This adds up to a whole lot of time: 5 hours yearly to manage SPAM, assuming you spend as little as 3 seconds on each email.
Can you do something about it? Yep.
Each of us has signed up (or got signed up) for hundreds of accounts over the years. And they don’t disappear when we stop using them. They sit there, holding onto your data, waiting to get hacked.
Most people don’t even remember half the services they signed up for. But companies don’t forget—they’re still collecting, storing, and (sometimes) selling your data.
If you’re tired of this, there’s a quick solution.
To get started, find and
Subscription-based services love your forgetfulness. And they are good at exploiting it:
So it’s no surprise that
It seems impossible to start organizing all this chaos, but trust us: it’s worth it. Studies show that being overwhelmed by digital noise can mess with your focus, raise anxiety, and cost you money without you realizing it.
Look, you don't need studies to explain why this is a problem. Just see how your mood shifts after dealing with your inbox. Though, to be fair, research does show that days with the highest email volumes resulted in approximately
So if you were waiting for a sign: here it is. Take a few minutes to make the internet way less annoying: cancel those old accounts, check your subscriptions, and mass unsubscribe. And to make things easier, use code NOONHACK25 for 25% off Yorba Premium!