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The tools we use to think change the ways in which we think. The invention of written language brought about a radical shift in how we process, organise, store, and transmit representations of the world. Although writing remains our primary information technology, today search engines and networking sites have revolutionised our outlook towards how we think and communicate with others. However, technologies change at the speed of weather. Sometime not much ahead in future, giants like Google and Facebook might be history. When semantic technologies emerged a few years ago, people started talking about how semantic web or search could prove to be a Google killer. This is because semantic search can deliver more relevant results because it ‘knows’ the content. Today, one can easily find startups applying semantic overlay to information to create search engines with intelligent capabilities and features. Innovation will soon outrank the ‘Page Rank’ search technology of Google in order to create more personalised search results. This would forever change the way we think and communicate. Realising Tim Berners Lee's vision of the Internet will then not seem conceited. This paper seeks to study the impact of such technologies on humanity and consider what they hold for the future. I believe that while the Internet will on one hand act as a ‘Personal assistant’ to its users, on the other, it will reduce human ability to act and make decisions in everyday life. These implications have huge ramifications and affect the nature of the human community in cyberspace. They will also redefine the contours of cyber culture.