A question for whoever reads this:

How do you think society will eventually conquer social media addiction? Or if you think we won't how do you think this affects humanity?

I would appreciate it if you help my question spread further by boosting it.

@gpowerf
My hunch is that traditional 'social' media is just eventually going to die off because it's just incredibly difficult to make money off it- even with ads

Twitter has only ever very rarely made a profit, I think snapchat has never made money. Reddit still isn't profitable

@gpowerf

There was a business insider article a few days ago about how instagram has been migrating from a social media platform into a content creator platform (businessinsider.com/social-med), Facebook has been trying to break into other industries with the meta rebrand for a few years, and i expect its because their social side is becoming less profitable
So I think the real question might be should/how should you fight media addiction in general

@gpowerf Social media is just a mechanism.

When did we conquer our letter-writing addiction? When the phone was popularized.

When did we conquer our phone addiction? When texting came about.

Humans aren't addicted to social media; they're addicted to being social. Social media just gives us a relatively safe space to quell those social desires with groups more like-minded than could be easily found offline.

So, to answer your question, we'll get over our social media addiction when the next, more addictive thing comes along... probably a device to allow us to upload our thoughts to the internet in real time with an ML algo to choose which thoughts are post-worthy and which thoughts go straight to the ad network for "more relevant content".

@gpowerf If it's a true addiction, then we'll treat it with harm-reduction measures like we (hopefully) use for drugs.
If it's a compulsion, then we'll use the same tools used to treat other compulsion.
If it's a shame-based stigma like "porn addiction", then we'll provide support to its users.

@gpowerf But for many people, I expect "social media addiction" is a pseudo-addiction, where people seek it and use it because it addresses an otherwise-unmet need.

Sign in to participate in the conversation
Qoto Mastodon

QOTO: Question Others to Teach Ourselves
An inclusive, Academic Freedom, instance
All cultures welcome.
Hate speech and harassment strictly forbidden.