this post was submitted on 17 Jun 2025
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Right to be Offline / Analog / Unplugged

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The developed world is increasingly forcing people to use incompetently designed technology. The #digitalTransformation movement is being forced onto people.

Just like we cannot rely on the public sector to solve the climate crisis, we also cannot rely on the public sector to deploy well-designed privacy-respecting inclusive technology. We always need an analog option.

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I’m working on a campaign against the use of Facebook by gov administrations. So far I have like 20 or so pages covering human rights violations by the gov when they impose the use of Facebook. But I have not yet written anything about addiction or mental health in this context.

I have never used Facebook myself, so I’m working somewhat blind. The question is whether Facebook is addictive and ultimately to what extent can it be faulted for mental health issues. I mean, of course it’s addictive to some extent, as is just about everything and anything. But the question is whether it can reasonably be argued that when a government pushes the use of Facebook onto people, is the gov significantly undermining people’s human right to living in good health? Or is that a far-fetched or crazy enough that it would actually dilute the campaign against gov-forced use of FB?

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[–] mysteriousquote@lemmy.world 3 points 1 day ago

I’m not sure how much research you’ve done, but a quick search of “Facebook addiction peer reviewed” shows plenty of results for science backed research into Facebook addiction and the negative impact of being chronically online/on social media.

It’s also probably worth digging into dark patterns used by Facebook and others to keep users coming back/focused on their feed.

I’d also be prepared for the counter argument: “governments are only using Facebook because that’s where the people are”.