Straying is also key term for moving around in digital space: Internet activities are often described as “surfing” or “floating” (Pschera 2013), but to stray the web offers a more critical approach. To roam the net is to be an active user and to choose one’s individual cyber sites. Kenneth Goldsmith’s Wasting Time on the Internet (2016) is an influential book for understanding the internet as creative material. My approach has parallels in that using the internet follows certain routines. But while straying is active, Goldsmith presents his internet experience as something that happens to him. When he wants to get lost, he “stumbles” across pages and “finds himself watching.” (p. 1). Goldsmith also introduces the flâneur in the context of surfing the net, but “he” (unfortunately, Goldsmith depicts a gendered male throughout) is not an engaged figure but a digital voyeur of the net’s content (p. 63).