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Tag: common sense

  • Former Facebook and Google Employees Form Coalition Against Tech Addiction

    Former Facebook and Google Employees Form Coalition Against Tech Addiction

    If there’s one group of people who best know the negative effects of tech addiction, it would be the Silicon Valley technologists who helped companies like Facebook and Google implement methods to steer the public’s attention. Now, former employees of these tech companies have banded together to speak against the addiction they had a hand in creating.

    “We were on the inside, we know what the companies measure,” former Google in-house ethicist Tristan Harris explained. “We know how they talk, and we know how the engineering works.” Harris is the co-founder of the Center for Humane Technology, a group of former Google and Facebook employees who joined forces to form an anti-tech addiction lobbying effort. The group, along with Common Sense Media, a non-profit media watchdog, plans to target around 55,000 schools in the United States in its effort.

    To fund the campaign, which is titled The Truth About Tech, Common Sense and the Center for Humane Technology managed to $7 million. Common Sense has been active in campaigns against the dangers of technology especially on heavy social media use which has been known to trigger depression. The group already received $50 million in donated airtime towards its cause after partnering with media companies like Comcast and DirectTV.

    Harris is a vocal critic against his former employer and has made it his goal to expose what he views as Google’s manipulative design techniques. In fact, he called the search engine’s tactics as a “civilization-scale mind-control machine” in a Bloomberg interview.

    “All the tech companies profit the more attention they extract out of human vessels,” Harris said in an interview with Quartz. “They profit by drilling into our brains to pull the attention out of it, by using persuasion techniques to keep them hooked.”

    Ultimately, the group wants legislation to regulate the activities of these tech firms. At the moment, the group is focused on banning the use of digital bots as well as a bill that will commission research on the impact of technology on children’s health.

    [Featured image via Pixabay (1), (2)]

  • Tablet Use May Be Associated With Neck Pain

    Tablet Use May Be Associated With Neck Pain

    Do you get neck and shoulder pain while using an iPad? A recent study from Harvard suggests that you might.

    The latest in a long line of studies that seem to stem from the utter boredom of university researchers comes this study from the Harvard School of Public Health that says users may experience shoulder and neck pain from prolonged tablet use.

    In the spirit of fairness, the study used both an iPad 2 and a Motorola Xoom. This made sure that fanboys from either camp couldn’t call out the other as being a leading cause of neck and shoulder discomfort.

    The four user configurations used in the study were holding the tablet in one’s hand while on the lap, the tablet in a case on the lap, the tablet in a case on a table and the tablet held upright on a table for the purpose of watching a film. The tablets were outfitted with various cases and stands that users are generally seen using in everyday situations.

    The study found that users of tablet computers in all four configurations run a higher risk of “neck and shoulder discomfort” compared to normal desktop or laptop users. This stems mostly from poor posture users exhibit when using tablet computers since their posture and head/neck angles are much more strained.

    The study concludes that the use of tablet computers is associated with much higher head and neck postures compared to “desktop computing scenarios.” The postures are affected by the type of case as well as the location of the device.

    They say that this data is valuable to tablet and accessory manufacturers to make their products more ergonomically designed to “promote neutral postures” and “increase the comfort of users.”

    The entire study can be viewed here for your reading pleasure.