Thought this was interesting coverage of a mix of different issues from inattentiveness, prompt resignation at slight effort, and tech and media illiteracy. It’s difficult to determine what all the contributors to these behaviors are across different age demographics, as you see it both with the young and the old in different forms.
There’s a sort of expectation from some of both to operate software more like simple machinery (appliances, more than applications) where you tap or click the buttons and it promptly and predictably responds (ideally), and when it doesn’t…To simply give up and try to find a different app that works as desired, or a person to help them.
lvxferre@mander.xyz 8 months ago
This is just a hypothesis, but I believe that one of the roots of the problem is a lower ability to retrieve information, caused by increased exposure to advertisement.
Regardless of the above, the problem is actually a big deal, once you consider things like meta-information (such as truth value and reliability of a claim) being also information; so if people don’t get info on their own, it’s easy to misinform them.
ElectroVagrant@lemmy.world 8 months ago
I’m not sure I follow where you’re coming from here. Is the idea that over-exposure to advertisement is processed the same as being provided general information, reducing people’s inclination to seek out information independently, despite the fact that advertising is only the provision of specific, narrow information?
lvxferre@mander.xyz 8 months ago
I think that we have a limited ability to process (absorb, analyse, retrieve what’s meaningful, discard what’s meaningless) information as a whole, that is used to process both general and narrow info. And, when we go considerably past our limits to process info, our brains start taking “shortcuts” to process the info that we’re exposed to, such as:
And that some things demand quite a bit of that “processing info” ability; for example
That’s advertisement in a nutshell - people telling you what you should do, without telling you all things that you need to know, in a flashy and repetitive way. And it applies specially well to online advertisement.
It wouldn’t be just advertisement doing it, mind you; but I do think that advertisement plays a huge role.
If the reasoning above is correct, this should be affecting all of us, not just GenZ and GenΑ. And we could even hypothesise if it’s affecting them more than GenX and GenY, as well as why:
Just my two cents, mind you. [Sorry for the long reply.]