It's been years now since this story broke, and it's still clinging to what seems to be a precarious web presence. For having made just a little too much fuss over homeless people in Paris, a Catholic bishop named Jacques Gaillot received the most surrealistic reassignment the Vatican could come up with. They made him Bishop of Partenia, a virtually imaginary location in the middle of the Sahara desert.
To make a long story short, Gaillot went online with his "virtual diocese" in a move that crystallized fundamental questions about the physicality of religious practice and belief. Partenia is the name of the diocese, which now transcends borders and serves the entire known universe from its large, multi-lingual website[Revised URL].
Elsewhere... Galaxy, "The professional's guide to a world of information," is a category-based web search service that offers a handy and comprehensive overview of religious communities on the Internet -- Christianity, Islam, Voodoo, you name it. A sourcebook for Earth's Community of Religions is a book whose stated purpose is "to deepen our understanding of each other and to encourage dialogue and cooperation;" this website contains much of the book's content in digital form.
In following those links you might find "Humanists" listed somewhere; but just in case you want a slightly more confrontational perspective, visit The Secular Web (formerly known as the Internet Infidels).
They say nothing in life is more certain than death and taxes, so I figured they had to be included in "Life Online." Now, I do not know why this Australian fellow made a website about Death [revised URL], but thankfully, it is not weird or macabre. In fact, he has a page of The Technical Writer's Euphemisms for Death [revised URL] which lightens things up a bit.
"If you try to sit, I'll tax your seat." -- Taxman (Lennon & McCartney).
For most people, taxation comes more frequently than death. So, make a note of this offering from the Internal Revenue Service. The IRS has gone online with a website where they try very hard to make taxes, well -- fun! They've got a mock newspaper format called the Digital Daily with the logo " FASTER THAN A SPEEDING 1040-EZ." If that doesn't get your sense of the ironic to kick in, consider that all this wit comes from the same organization that puts liens on the property of widows and orphans to pay dead spouses' back taxes. Ah well, never mind that -- the website is indeed very helpful for those seeking information, forms, jobs, and more.