The self-destruction website is a pandemic message time capsule

The self-destruction website is a pandemic message time capsule

A little over a year ago, a website has been launched that is designed to self-destruct if it does not receive at least one message in a 24-hour period. Everyone can leave a message on the website, which has spent all its life operating for a single time in time: the SARS-COV-2 pandemic. As the world goes slowly to normal, the website has become something like a time capsule that the public thought during their months isolation.

The website, appropriately called “this website will self-destruct, launched in April 2020 only weeks after the announcement of the pandemic. Many places were familiar with complete locks, the public was under the stress of uncertainty as to the duration of the duration of the situation and the reports of depression and loneliness had quickly climbed.

The website allows anyone to leave a short message, which will be found at random and read by other people who click on the “Read” button. However, the website will live long since it continues to receive messages. Once the attention decreases and the messages finally end, the website will be turned off.

The launch date of the site and the simple design have made an ideal way to record snapshots of what people around the world thought during the pandemic. A journey through random messages left over the past year reveals concerns about how the virus could affect the key aspects of life: health, job security, finance and relations. Solitude extracts are interspersed with hopes of hope and encouragement.

There is no sign of interest in the slow-down website, so it may stay alive for the rest of the pandemic. Experts expect the pandemic to conclude in stages, with developed countries that returned to “normal” countries before the poorest countries. Assuming everything is happening as planned, the pandemic can be fully superior to the world by the end of next year.

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