In the digital world, attention is king, and because clicks feed revenue, our social feeds are now full of AI-generated ragebait and misinformation. But according to a recent report in the Financial Times, we are now past peak social media. Unless you’re over the age of sixty-five.
Infinite scrolling was invented by Aza Raskin, former head of user design at the internet browser Mozilla. It refers to how social media platforms are designed such that content is continuously refreshed.
Psychological research on this compulsive consumption has linked doomscrolling to heightened anxiety and mental distress. Raskin had no illusions about doomscrolling’s effects on our brains: “I know as a designer that by taking away the stopping cue, I can make you do what I want you to do,” he said in an interview in which he also apologized for the harms his invention had caused.
But as social media is increasingly becoming the home of “slop” and “brain rot,” undergoing what the technology writer Cory Doctorow has called “enshittification,” it is also turning away users.
Social media use, according to the journalist and data analyst John Burn-Murdoch, reached its highpoint in 2022. Since then, the total time that adults in developed countries spent on social media has declined by as much as 10 percent. On average, people spend two hours and twenty minutes a day looking at social media.
Surprisingly, younger users are turning away from social media the most. In research published last year, the Pew Research Center discovered a highly critical attitude among teenagers toward social media. Many teenagers are wary of the risks of a life spent online. According to the Pew study, some 45 percent believe that they spend too much time on social media.
However, there is a surprising exception to the general trend. Those aged sixty-five and above have become terminally online.
An article in the Economist reports that patients in clinics that treat screen addiction are…
Auteur: Ed Luker

