> We mostly take it for granted that digital technology comes with serious social and developmental drawbacks, even if these may not justify outright panic. As a result, most of us now look on our devices and the industry that makes them with a kind of dependent contempt.
This articulates a hazy feeling I've had for a few years now. I think it hits the nail on the head.
It's fascinating how few people (particularly, but not only, tech laypeople) get excited about shiny new tech anymore. I think that quote explains why extremely well. Tech has gone from being a liberator or bringer of freedom to being an oppressor that we feel forced to dance with.
I think that's a situation that cannot persist, and if our industry doesn't take this problem seriously, there will be a comeuppance that will be hard to recover from.
Our industry needs to go back to building things that benefit people without keeping them firmly under a thumb. But I'm not sure that we will.
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[ 3.7 ms ] story [ 16.8 ms ] thread> We mostly take it for granted that digital technology comes with serious social and developmental drawbacks, even if these may not justify outright panic. As a result, most of us now look on our devices and the industry that makes them with a kind of dependent contempt.
This articulates a hazy feeling I've had for a few years now. I think it hits the nail on the head.
It's fascinating how few people (particularly, but not only, tech laypeople) get excited about shiny new tech anymore. I think that quote explains why extremely well. Tech has gone from being a liberator or bringer of freedom to being an oppressor that we feel forced to dance with.
I think that's a situation that cannot persist, and if our industry doesn't take this problem seriously, there will be a comeuppance that will be hard to recover from.
Our industry needs to go back to building things that benefit people without keeping them firmly under a thumb. But I'm not sure that we will.