Wouldn't it be funny, if that would end the doom scroll cause suddenly it's a disturbance and can't be skipped like other non liked content, so it breaks the trance and leaves the user with anger instead of numbness?
Technology
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
Our Rules
- Follow the lemmy.world rules.
- Only tech related content.
- Be excellent to each another!
- Mod approved content bots can post up to 10 articles per day.
- Threads asking for personal tech support may be deleted.
- Politics threads may be removed.
- No memes allowed as posts, OK to post as comments.
- Only approved bots from the list below, to ask if your bot can be added please contact us.
- Check for duplicates before posting, duplicates may be removed
Approved Bots
User tolerance of online ads is really being tested lately with the increase of unskippable crap. I suspect that some will stop rather than deal with it, but most will just tolerate it. Which is what they're counting on.
I guess you're right, but especially Instagram for me is something that relies on this numbness doom scrolling comes with. Every other thing has another driver. Like YT or Twitch is something for entertainment like TV, so (semi) active watching stuff, Facebook and twitter (now X) is something to get angry about, but Instagram is unsatisfying scrolling without knowing why. But why let it stop here and there, if it breaks this drooled scrolling. And if you're in need of this feeling, there is also tiktok (as of right know, until the unstoppable ads are profitable).
I sure hope so. I use Instagram to follow my friends and local businesses, but I can get sucked into reels too. I have an app that specifically pops up if I spend too much time in Instagram to break that cycle.
What's that app? I need that.
I need something like a smartwatch to just tap me on the wrist every 10 minutes so I can gather my thoughts. I want to be consciously deciding to waste all my time online instead of just losing half hour chunks of my day by accident.
In a Neal Brennan stand-up special (Piped link) he mentions he uses a Pavlok to shock him every 3 minutes on stage to remind him to smile.
LOL this is ridiculous but also perhaps exactly the thing I need.
Have you tried just looking at "Following"? That shows everything in chronological order, without ads. Lets me quickly see what's new, and then close the app. I don't discover many new recipes anymore, but that's a price I'm willing to pay.
Is there a way to set it to that permanently?
Not that I know of... Most of the time I forget to change, but since the second post I see is an ad 90% of the time I usually realize my mistake very quickly.
The sheer amount of accounts I don't follow and/or adds I DO see already do this for me. It's a nice "feature" they added for me. Way to go Meta. I get bored fast now and close the app.
they're stress testing the user base. they don't give half a flying fuck how outraged you are. they only care about whether you'll quit the platform. which you won't.
"We have determined that we'll be able to fill 80% of the user's display with advertising before inducing seizures."
From Ready Player One movie.
Outrage, yes, but what about decreased usage? What's the effect on revenue and stock price? C-suite pay?
Nothing.
What was the effect of the reddit migration on reddit; nothing.
But for us it was everything with a brand new community <3
People are sleepwalking
Just delete your account and uninstall. It seems people forget they have that option.
An “ad break” icon will appear with a countdown timer that prevents users from browsing through more content until they view an ad, at which point the counter starts running down.
So the user has to interact with the ad prompt, they aren't just presented with an ad?
If so, that sounds like an even worse experience.
Shut up and drink your verification can!
Mountain Dew is for me and you 🎵
What's the difference? Most of what's on there is an ad for something. A lifestyle, a look, a road trip destination, a festival, a food.
It breaks the scrolling, breaking user experience.
People will get outraged, scream for a bit and then accept it and keep using the service.
The additional ad-revenue will outscale the few users that quit by far and thus enshittification continues.
Tho i guess we should be happy for the few that escape the shothole instagram because social media is cancer anyways.
People need to stop using Instagram.
They cant. Its an addiction or stockholm syndrome
I don't get it. I go to Instagram a couple of times a day. I start scrolling. The third post is something I haven't followed or liked. Then the fourth, and the fifth. So I close the app. I spend like 5 minuter there daily. The whole discover page is just filled with trash I have no interest for.
Sure I enjoy climbing. But I don't care for videos of people tying knots or lightly dressed chicks doing some low grade bouldering. Why does the app think it's better than me?
My Instagram feed is already 90% ads. There are almost no posts from people i actually follow, and most of those are artists i like trying to sell their tour or merch. It's a fundamentally broken platform as is
It's not broken. The platform just isn't meant for real people to communicate with each other anymore. It's an advertising farm people show up to willingly because it used to be an interesting place.
PIxelfed has no ads (https://pixelfed.org/) - Since we're over here building the Fediverse, I just wanted to mention there ARE options.
Nonetheless, they’ll probably get away with it, because other than among a handful of autistic furries, there’s no demand for non-algorithmic, non-enshittified social networks.
The celebrities and brand-builders who use Instagram to grow their brand aren’t switching to Pixelfed or Misskey because, without algorithms boosting them, there’s no clout to be had. Artists, indie bands, vintage clothing sellers and other self-marketers are staying put for similar reasons. (Basically, if your goal is “self-promote at scale and hope to make ends meet” rather than “find a handful of weird friends with the same kind of damage as you”, the fediverse is worse than useless: it’s lost time and effort with nothing to show for it.) Your normie friends, who want to keep up with their favourite pop stars and tattoo artists and have a busy schedule without an extra 15 minutes a day for a social network few people use, aren’t going to add Pixelfed to their dopamine loops.
ah, one gotta love the enshittification
Thoughts and takeaways, plus 3 viable solutions:
Thoughts
1️⃣ I've said it before, and I'll say it again: Enshittification might be a good thing. Here's why
I don’t “like” that things have gotten this bad, but I do like that the worse things get, the more we can collectively organize and pressure reform to fix these things.
2️⃣ These tests are usually run on relatively small subsets of the user base. Remember when they rolled out hiding likes? That was rolled out periodically as well.
They typically also run different types of user bases. They already know the hardcore "influencers" and people who have built a public following will never leave the platform, since they're too invested already, and are the people/publications that contribute the most to network effects. I.e., you're on there because they're on there.
3️⃣ Remember when Tim Kendall (former executive at Facebook) says that they talked about Zuckerberg having ultimate control over these 3 distinct goals?
- Engagement: Drive up your usage. Keep you scrolling, liking, commenting, and remaining active on the platform.
- Growth: Encouraging you to keep coming back and inviting your friends, and getting them to invite their friends, and so on.
- Advertising: Make sure that as growth and engagement are happening, advertising revenue is maximized.
That's what's happening here—this is dial #3 being turned up.
Solutions
1. The most obvious: Delete your account
I know, I know—network effects are tough to break.
Tell your friends and family to delete theirs. Make yourself unreachable on Facebook-owned platforms.
Most people are posting less as traditional posts, and more as stories. If stories is your thing, Signal has stories. This is a really secure, private, and still convenient way to share whatever you want throughout the day.
If your favorite restaurant changes your dish's recipe, you'd prolly stop going, right? Well, that recipe's been changing, and we continue to put up with it despite an increasingly worse product.
2. For those looking for an alternative: Use Pixelfed
It doesn't have nearly the same type of content or user base size that Instagram does. But the same way that we built Facebook little by little, the same can be done for healthier alternative platforms.
This might also help your reduction in using social media, if you're looking for that.
3. For those who can't/will never leave Instagram: Use an open source native mobile app (Android-specific)
If you have an Android-based mobile operating system, there are apps like MyInsta and Instander that give you a native Instagram experience while blocking all of the ads.
They also have app-specific settings that allow you to customize your Instagram experience even further, such as (but limited to):
- Downloading photos/reels/entire carousels
- Reduces data sent to Instagram (analytics, ads, and other requests)
- Ghost mode
- Block reels, posts, stories, explore, comments, or whatever else
- Tons more
I run a basketball media outlet (InThePaintCrew) and a lifestyle/photography page (LifeViaChicago), and being able to modify the experience to remove the noise/clutter when a native Instagram app is needed is helpful.
Many say they would stop using the app entirely if the ads become widespread.
oh don’t threaten me with good time. It would be amazing if my friends would be forced to stop using instagram so I would not be forced to log in just to catch up on stories or keep in touch
Isn't that standard practice nowadays? You push an outrageous thing to test the reactions, then you pull back and then you push something similar but toned down to be more acceptable. A while later you incrementally move towards your initial plan.
Their algorithm is already abrasive enough. I routinely find myself following people I did not elect to follow. Throw some stupid adds in there, to just make it worse...
One sad reality with moving on from these sites is that you really become "out of the loop" of what is currently happening with your circle. They all are sharing, posting about what happening and there is simply no way of knowing that. I recently experienced this and was a bit painful.
At some point I realized who my true "circle" was. I think I deleted facebook in 2011 or something. That made me realize I really did not give a shit about what someone I went to school with is doing. Am I ever going to see them again? Probably not. Do I actually care? I guess not. My real circle I still keep in touch with, talk on the phone, visit, message. I don't need these garbage apps to do this.
Think of how much time I get back in my life if my wife couldn't send me 50 reels everyday
Wow, glad I moved on. But its a shame that Lemmy or Mastodon content quantity is still a problem.
I know people shit on those bots that repost content from Reddit and other places, but it’s a really simple way to bootstrap content on Lemmy. I think if we want to win we need to be open to that.
But in a forum like Lemmy, we need discussions and this is simply not happening with bot posts at the moment.
I've considered setting one up for myself for very specific content on my own server, but I'm not sure where I'd start with it. It doesn't seem as simple as kicking up a docker-compose file.
Can only hope that as sites continue further down the enshitification road, more users question it and find the fediverse.
I only learnt about it due to Reddits API changes causing Apollo to stop working.
But users are too addicted to "traditional" social media, so no matter what happens they won't stop using it.
They complain a little and stop there.