From their own internal metrics, tech giants have long known what independent research now continuously validates: that the content that is most likely to go viral is that which induces strong feelings such as outrage and disgust, regardless of its underlying veracity. Moreover, they also know that such content is heavily engaged with and most profitable. Far from acting against false, harmful content, they placed profits above its staggering—and damaging—social impact to implicitly encourage it while downplaying the massive costs.

Social media titans embrace essentially the same hypocrisy the tobacco industry embodied when they feigned concern over harm reduction while covertly pushing their product ever more aggressively. With the reelection of Trump, our tech giants now no longer even pretend to care.

Engagement is their business model, and doubt about the harms they cause is their product. Tobacco executives, and their bought-off scientists, once proclaimed uncertainty over links between cigarettes and lung cancer. Zuckerberg has likewise testified to Congress, “The existing body of scientific work has not shown a causal link between using social media and young people having worse mental health, ” even while studies find self-harm, eating disorder and misogynistic material spreads on these platform unimpeded. This equivocation echoes protestations of tobacco companies that there was no causal evidence of smoking harms, even as incontrovertible evidence to the contrary rapidly amassed.

  • Linktank@lemmy.today
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    1 month ago

    Except, you know, tobacco companies are modern day tobacco companies. They were never defeated.

    • acosmichippo@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      it’s an analogy; the author is drawing parallels between them. Obviously Tobacco companies were not “defeated” but they were regulated to hell, and I’m sure the author would say that’s what we need to do with social media too.

      • SaharaMaleikuhm@feddit.org
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        1 month ago

        Yeah, it’s crazy how many commenters here are completely missing the point. I should really stop assuming people have any sort of intelligence.

      • taladar@sh.itjust.works
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        1 month ago

        The flaw in the analogy is that it assumes that those effects are limited to some companies when in reality every single company that existed in history has behaved this way if they weren’t stopped by regulation.

        • acosmichippo@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          The flaw in the analogy is that it assumes that those effects are limited to some companies

          no it doesn’t.

    • sunzu2@thebrainbin.org
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      1 month ago

      They won’t stop mega corping like they used to, they got supplemented by cars then oil then banks and now tech/pharma

      • thejml@lemm.ee
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        1 month ago

        No company will stop attempting to achieve mega corp status in a capitalist environment. Gotta make that line go up and to the right!

    • Sixty@sh.itjust.works
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      1 month ago

      Muted in the English world. I argue junk food commercials draw a lot of parallels with cigarette commercials of the past. For some reason obesity isn’t worth prevention so the advertisements are pretty gross.

      Soft drinks. Coca Cola especially really loves to tie emotions and sports/holidays to sugar water.

  • dwazou@lemm.ee
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    1 month ago

    Getting a dumbphone was one of the best decisions I took in my life. It helps me focus better and read books. I don’t actually need the internet with me 24/7. If you really need me, you can call.

    Try it. Some people will call you crazy. Just ignore them.

  • Aproposnix@scribe.disroot.org
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    1 month ago

    I would liken them to the automotive industry. Both have deeply harmed society by isolating people from each other (it sounds counterintuitive, I know). Both have created infrastructure that prioritizes individual consumption over collective well being, restructured daily life around corporate products, and normalized a form of privatized existence that erodes public space, shared culture, and relational life. Just as cars gutted walkable communities and made human scale living subordinate to machines, Big Tech has gutted organic social interaction, subordinating communication and attention to platforms designed for extraction and control. #fuckcars #fuckbigtech

    • sanity_is_maddening@lemm.ee
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      1 month ago

      Great callback. I haven’t thought of Thank You For Smoking in ages.

      That is a prescient little film from my teenage years back in earlly 00’s. The film was a nice stab at the culture of “spin” and how lobbying was gonna dig us into the hell we are now.

      Hmmm, Thank You For Posting would be an actual relevant sequel in the time of endless sequels. Backdropping it with the lobbying for the Turd Reich and the ascension of Fascism and you got something there…

      Thank you for reminding me of Thank You For Smoking.