Loading...
Title : Facebook: To Improve Our Mental Illness, Keep Doing What Causes it More
link : Facebook: To Improve Our Mental Illness, Keep Doing What Causes it More
Facebook: To Improve Our Mental Illness, Keep Doing What Causes it More
RT | Dec 18, 2017 |
Responding to a spate of comments made by former executives and investors about the dangers of Facebook, the company published a blog post reflecting on its role in society Friday.
In November, former executive Chamath Palihapitiya pointed to the company’s “short-term, dopamine-driven feedback loops” which “are destroying how society works,” during a talk at Stanford University. He said he felt “tremendous guilt” about his role in the company.
Also in November, founding president Sean Parker said he is a “conscientious objector” to social media and that Facebook had success by “exploiting a vulnerability in human psychology.”
Facebook was built to exploit ‘psychological vulnerability’ – founding pres https://t.co/1hPwgkRoEdhttp://pic.twitter.com/abGA0fU4rk— RT America (@RT_America) November 10, 2017
The pair admitted they worry about the effects social media will have on their children, but said Facebook has always been about “enhancing your relationships offline.”
“In general, when people spend a lot of time passively consuming information — reading but not interacting with people — they report feeling worse afterward,” Facebook says. “On the other hand, actively interacting with people — especially sharing messages, posts and comments with close friends and reminiscing about past interactions — is linked to improvements in well-being.”
By Facebook’s logic, if we interact more on social media, we will be happier, advice that aligns with the company’s profit generation by encouraging users to engage more with the platform. Facebook reported 16 percent growth in monthly active users from the previous year in its third quarter report in November.
So Facebook released this because they want more people to interact on Facebook rather than just browsing— Blake Young (@Young95_B) December 18, 2017
While reading this Facebook blog, I can't help but feel like I'm reading a tobacco company article from the 60s about the social benefits of smoking together. https://t.co/cNEatCc95a— Peadar Grogan (@padrg) December 16, 2017
Good that @facebook are taking these issues seriously. Rebalancing your active/passive use of #socialmedia is likely to be better for your #mentalwellbeing, but this could be better done by reducing passive use and overall time spent https://t.co/J5nfBJeSRZ#StatusOfMind— RSPH (@R_S_P_H) December 18, 2017
The blog post references a study the company conducted with Robert Kraut at Carnegie Mellon University which found that “people who sent or received more messages, comments and Timeline posts reported improvements in social support, depression and loneliness,” and that “the positive effects were even stronger when people talked with their close friends online. Simply broadcasting status updates wasn’t enough; people had to interact one-on-one with others in their network.”
“In sum, our research and other academic literature suggests that it’s about how you use social media that matters when it comes to your well-being,” Facebook says, suggesting those users who report feeling inadequate and depressed just aren’t doing it right.
Facebook said it has made several changes to “help support people’s well-being,” including improving the news feed by demoting “clickbait headlines and false news,” and making it so posts from “friends you care about” will appear at the top of your feed.
It has introduced the “snooze” button to allow users to temporarily mute a person or page and the “take a break,” function to allow people to control how much of their ex-partner’s content they see.
The blog post also boasts of the company’s steps to prevent suicide, likely introduced in response to negative publicity garnered after a number of suicides and murders were streamed on the social network.
.@facebook to expand suicide prevention AI following successful US tests https://t.co/Ugzvntl5b8— RT UK (@RTUKnews) December 3, 2017
---
ExtraSensory.News doesn't have ads. Why? Because Google won't allow it. Other alternative sites are plastered with them. We do not accept funding from big corporations or Government controlled entities. In order to survive, we need your help. You can support this website by subscribing. |
Loading...
thus Article Facebook: To Improve Our Mental Illness, Keep Doing What Causes it More
that is all articles Facebook: To Improve Our Mental Illness, Keep Doing What Causes it More This time, hopefully can provide benefits to all of you. Okay, see you in another article posting.
You now read the article Facebook: To Improve Our Mental Illness, Keep Doing What Causes it More with the link address https://healthylivingsimple.blogspot.com/2017/12/facebook-to-improve-our-mental-illness.html
0 Response to "Facebook: To Improve Our Mental Illness, Keep Doing What Causes it More"
Post a Comment