The New Killer Addiction
It’s epidemic. All over the planet. And there doesn’t appear to be a cure.
People, especially young people, are
increasingly no longer involved in the real world around them but are almost
constantly engrossed in the shallow artificiality that is flipping past their emotionless
zombie gazes on their smartphones and tablets.
Take a short break from your own cell and look around in any public
park, at the beach, on school campuses, in airline terminals, on buses and in
airplanes. Nearly everyone is immersed
in Phoneworld. You see couples on the street
far more engaged with their phones than with each other. People ostensibly go out for a group dinner,
then rudely ignore each other so they can receive messages and feverishly thumb
texts off into the ether. Tourists
standing before nature’s splendors take endless phone shots and selfies rather than
indulge in old-fashioned experiencing and
enjoying.
The addiction all too often has gruesome and
deadly consequences. Driving while
texting and talking on cellphones is killing 5,000 people a year and injuring
thousands more across our nation alone. Even
distracted walking with resultant injuries is becoming a threat, with people
bumping into each other on busy sidewalks or stepping out into traffic.
A recent Baylor University study of college
students, published in the Journal of
Behavioral Addictions, found that women spend an average of ten hours daily
on their cellphones, while men spend an average of eight hours. Subtract sleep time and that doesn’t leave many
hours for reality. Sixty percent of all students
queried admitted they may have Screen Addiction.
Nobody seems to know what to do about it.
There are increasing pressures that deepen the
addiction through thousands upon thousands of apps. A Hilton app lets you use your phone as a
room key. Restaurants and supermarkets
and stores are encouraging you to use your phone as an ordering and checkout
tool, allowing them to operate with fewer employees. Theme parks have navigational and ride-wait-time
apps that speed customer flow. There are
gadgets that tether your phone to you so you seldom even have to put it down or
into a pocket or purse.
And all the while robotic web crawlers, lurking
invisibly and silently behind our billions of screens, are at work for vast
data centers like Facebook and Google and Amazon, tirelessly watching and
listening and gathering and storing away data on every addict, from our educational
and employment and medical and political and social histories to our dining and
entertainment preferences to our brands of underwear.
Is this an early sign of artificial
intelligence (AI) creeping into our lives, eventually to seek more control over
us than it obviously already has? Robots
are not only building our vehicles but are also taking over driving them. Computers are piloting and landing planes and
controlling our habitats and talking cordially with us and even generating news
reports.
We lost one of our great minds recently. Before he left us, Stephen Hawking warned humankind
about the insidious encroachment of AI. So
far, there’s no evidence I can see that anyone has listened to him.
We’re all too mesmerized by—and intimately occupied
with—our wonderful cellphones.
Phil
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