>The present research (N = 1204) explored the implications of overusing the addiction label. In Study 1, a national quota sample of Instagram users (N = 380) overestimated their addiction to the app, and those who perceived themselves as more addicted (but not more habitual) experienced less ability to control their use. We show that the perception of addiction likely arises from popular media’s frequent labeling of social media as addictive (vs. habit forming). Study 2 (N = 824) demonstrated experimentally that framing frequent Instagram use as an addiction has deleterious consequences for user self-efficacy, including reducing perceived control over social media use and increasing self-blame for overuse. In addition, misperceiving excessive social media use as addictive potentially diverts users from effective strategies that could be used to curb overuse habits.
> Framing it as addiction is popular now but it removes user agency:
You can use the same reasoning on smoking too. Or any other drugs.
I am currently trying to get rid of my dependence, almost an addiction on Reddit. And nothing has been working, except blocking Reddit on DNS level in my router for all devices and all browsers equally. And even then I will write "reddit" into address bar several times a day to get no response from browser. Like a gambler pulling a slot machine which is not connected to power.
One strategy that I've found useful for changing my behavior: changing browsers settings to not recommend sites or fill in urls from any source be it history, favorites/bookmarks, search etc. By not having the url auto fill it makes me type urls in manually from memory and this usually involves enough purposeful cognitive effort that I can stop any automatic visiting to sites. I've also uninstalled the browser from my phone (disabled built in browser on lineage and uninstalled firefox). If there is a rare time I really, really need a browser I'll download and install it for a specific task and uninstall it right after.
Parrot “user-agency” all you want. We’ve seen what outsourcing solutions to “user-agency” does.
Over half the population lacks the self stewardship to not eat themselves into being a fat pig. If “user-agency” was any sort of solution, I wouldn’t be paying for the negative externalities of all you fat fucks.
To piggyback[1], agency discussion are orthogonal to affecting outcomes.
Shifting responsibility typically justifies outcomes rather than making meaningful change. It resolves the cognitive dissonance between a negative outcome and inaction.
If one is actually interested in improving the negative result, it doesn't matter what their personal relation to the cause is. The process is simple: make meaningful change to to the system that causally proceeds the outcome.
In your example of obesity, personal responsibility is meaningless if one's goal is to decrease it.
Same with the negative effects of social media. If you care about the consequences, personal responsibility's only effect is to make one ok with inaction.
I’d unironically mandate taking GLP-1s for those who are significantly overweight as a precondition for getting on Medicaid, Medicare, and even private insurance. It’s time society takes a real stand against hambeasts.
this almost sounds like victim-blaming. regardless of user-agency.... if these companies are intentionally engineering addictive products, they deserve to be regulated or eliminated since they cant be "trusted" to do the right thing, which in this particular case is "not addicting children to brainrot clickbait". How does clickbait addiction in any way serve the betterment of society?
Framing it as addiction is popular now but it removes user agency:
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-025-27053-2
>The present research (N = 1204) explored the implications of overusing the addiction label. In Study 1, a national quota sample of Instagram users (N = 380) overestimated their addiction to the app, and those who perceived themselves as more addicted (but not more habitual) experienced less ability to control their use. We show that the perception of addiction likely arises from popular media’s frequent labeling of social media as addictive (vs. habit forming). Study 2 (N = 824) demonstrated experimentally that framing frequent Instagram use as an addiction has deleterious consequences for user self-efficacy, including reducing perceived control over social media use and increasing self-blame for overuse. In addition, misperceiving excessive social media use as addictive potentially diverts users from effective strategies that could be used to curb overuse habits.
> Framing it as addiction is popular now but it removes user agency:
You can use the same reasoning on smoking too. Or any other drugs.
I am currently trying to get rid of my dependence, almost an addiction on Reddit. And nothing has been working, except blocking Reddit on DNS level in my router for all devices and all browsers equally. And even then I will write "reddit" into address bar several times a day to get no response from browser. Like a gambler pulling a slot machine which is not connected to power.
One strategy that I've found useful for changing my behavior: changing browsers settings to not recommend sites or fill in urls from any source be it history, favorites/bookmarks, search etc. By not having the url auto fill it makes me type urls in manually from memory and this usually involves enough purposeful cognitive effort that I can stop any automatic visiting to sites. I've also uninstalled the browser from my phone (disabled built in browser on lineage and uninstalled firefox). If there is a rare time I really, really need a browser I'll download and install it for a specific task and uninstall it right after.
same here, i type in `news` and end up here dozens of time a day :)
At least we have the knowledge (and introspection) to work towards stopping this behavior.
Go take GLP-1s, they are an anti addiction measure.
Also this place is just orange Reddit. It’s no better than Reddit.
I guess it really depends on what Reddit experience you’re referring to as being no better.
Most Reddit user experiences are probably nothing like HN at all. Give r/all a whirl if you think they’re comparable.
Parrot “user-agency” all you want. We’ve seen what outsourcing solutions to “user-agency” does.
Over half the population lacks the self stewardship to not eat themselves into being a fat pig. If “user-agency” was any sort of solution, I wouldn’t be paying for the negative externalities of all you fat fucks.
To piggyback[1], agency discussion are orthogonal to affecting outcomes.
Shifting responsibility typically justifies outcomes rather than making meaningful change. It resolves the cognitive dissonance between a negative outcome and inaction.
If one is actually interested in improving the negative result, it doesn't matter what their personal relation to the cause is. The process is simple: make meaningful change to to the system that causally proceeds the outcome.
In your example of obesity, personal responsibility is meaningless if one's goal is to decrease it.
Same with the negative effects of social media. If you care about the consequences, personal responsibility's only effect is to make one ok with inaction.
1. Intended
Agree, self agency or not, people are depressed and loosing critical thunking because all of it is designed as a slot machines.
I’d unironically mandate taking GLP-1s for those who are significantly overweight as a precondition for getting on Medicaid, Medicare, and even private insurance. It’s time society takes a real stand against hambeasts.
Why are you using dehumanizing language here? It's completely unnecessary and only serves to reinforce harmful and false stereotypes.
this almost sounds like victim-blaming. regardless of user-agency.... if these companies are intentionally engineering addictive products, they deserve to be regulated or eliminated since they cant be "trusted" to do the right thing, which in this particular case is "not addicting children to brainrot clickbait". How does clickbait addiction in any way serve the betterment of society?
Tobacco CEO's Statement to Congress 1994 News Clip "Nicotine is not addictive."
https://senate.ucsf.edu/tobacco-ceo-statement-to-congress
Blowtorch the creep
Related:
Mark Zuckerberg Lied to Congress. We Can't Trust His Testimony
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47060486