What Eyeballs Did During The Facebook Nap

Tom Beecher beecher at beecher.cc
Fri Oct 8 15:26:52 UTC 2021


>
> Which they probably will, but it won't be labeled as dangerous or
> leading to immediate mental harm.
>

There is already lots of published research on social media addiction that
does call it out just that strongly.

There is a reason why that company has started going to great lengths in
recent years to make it harder for outside researchers to do similar work.

On Fri, Oct 8, 2021 at 11:22 AM Mark Tinka <mark at tinka.africa> wrote:

>
>
> On 10/8/21 17:07, cosmo wrote:
>
> > A psychologist would probably describe this as "self soothing behavior"
> >
> > An addiction specialist would identify it as illicit drug substitution
> > : https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7370931/
>
> Which they probably will, but it won't be labeled as dangerous or
> leading to immediate mental harm. And as such, will fly under the radar
> as an addiction that needs to be managed in the same way we manage
> opioid addiction, heroine addiction, sex addiction, alcohol addiction,
> nicotine addiction, e.t.c. All the stuff we have anonymous groups and
> sponsors for.
>
> Mark.
>
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