What do you think?
Rate this book
357 pages, Hardcover
First published January 6, 2022
Every day as a direct result of his invention, the combined total of 200,000 more human lifetimes - every moment from birth to death - is now spent scrolling through a screen
These sites and apps are designed to train our minds to crave frequent rewards....
The technical term for this system - coined by the brilliant Harvard professor Shoshana Zuboff - is surveillance capitalism....
Facebook makes more money for every extra second you are staring through a screen at their site, and they lose money every time you put the screen away
They have to be stopped. They have to be stopped by us.
...Are we going to join them and put up a fight? Or are we going to let invasive technologies win by default?
I realized that if Facebook won't stop promoting facism - promoting Nazism in Germany - they will never care about protecting your focus and attention.
Most people don't want a fast life - they want a good life. Nobody lies on their deathbed and thinks about all that they contributed to economic growth.
We could redefine prosperity to mean having time to spend with our children, or to be in nature, or to sleep, or to dream, or to have secure work
I want to live in that light - the light of knowing, of achieving our ambitions, of being fully alive - and not in the menacing orange light of it all burning down
"we are, collectively, experiencing “a more rapid exhaustion of attention resources."The science is fascinating and as one might expect, a little subjective. This book suggests everything one would expect: too much social media, physical and mental exhaustion, too much choice, stress, constant interruptions, isolation, attention deficit and rapid switching between tasks etc. And some things I didn't expect: diet, pollution, reading nonfiction.
"The more novels you read, the better you were at reading other people’s emotions."Sounds right though I do know people who read fiction exclusively that are not good at reading emotions. I do think that the concept of the quote is well accepted as true.
"reading nonfiction books, by contrast, had no effect on your empathy."Sounds specious. I have no idea what nonfiction he's reading but I just finished Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI and I was frickin livid and empathetic. I suppose an argument could be made that reading fiction got me there; however… chicken or egg which was first?