skip to main |
skip to sidebar
Will Facebook Kill Holly?
I have
to be careful about how I write today's column.
I do not want to betray any trusts.
But on the other hand, a topic that up to now has been an abstraction
for me has become personal. A statistic
has turned into someone I know by only two degrees of separation. To protect anonymity, I have changed names
and some details of what I will write here.
But I assure you that what I am going to write is based on facts as
personally told to me yesterday by someone I will call Holly, who is a twelve-year-old
girl.
Facebook,
which has now renamed itself Meta, has been in the news a lot lately, and in
this column as well, because of revelations by a whistleblower named Frances
Haugen. Haugen is a former Facebook
employee who has made thousands of pages of internal company documents public,
and has testified to Congress that Facebook's own research showed how harmful
Instagram and other Facebook services are to teenagers (girls especially) at
the same time that Facebook's CEO (and owner of 55% of Facebook's voting stock)
Mark Zuckerberg was saying that his firm did not have such data. The blowback from articles in the Wall
Street Journal and other outlets detailing the hypocritical actions of
Zuckerberg and his company have been so severe that the firm dropped plans it
had announced to develop a new service for preteens called Instagram Kids.
A recent
article on the Mind Matters website described these problems and quoted
results of a 2017 survey by the UK's Royal Society for Public Health and the Young
Health Movement that showed, among other damning evidence, that the average
age at which a child creates an Instagram account is 10, even though the
software says you must be at least 13 to join.
Among users aged 14 to 24, all but one of the social-media platforms
surveyed showed a negative score for well-being.
With all
this as a background, let me introduce Holly.
My wife and I have known her slightly for at least a couple of years, and
when she was ten she invited us to see her elementary school's production of Peter
Pan, which for an older couple with no children was quite a treat. Although she has since moved to a nearby
town, she has the opportunity to visit us now and then, and yesterday was one
of those visits.
Holly is
one of those girls who will rattle on about whatever she's doing if you just
stand there and look interested, so my wife and I invited her in and we listened
to what she had to say about what she'd been doing since we saw her almost a
year ago. She talked about horses, a
vacation trip her family took back East, and then school. She attends school in a medium-size town that
has a reputation for old-fashioned conservative family values, and if something
bad is happening there, it's probably happening everywhere else too.
She had
her smartphone with her, of course, and as she took it out she said her parents
have put some controls on it to limit her social-media use. While I cannot recall her exact words, the
following is substantially what she said next, when we asked her how things
have gone at school with COVID-19.
"Oh,
it's been bad. One of my friends
committed suicide over the summer. They
were bullying her and it just got so bad she couldn't take it anymore. That's why I don't mind my folks doing what they
did to my phone."
After
Holly left and I had a chance to think about the enormity of what she told me,
it began to sink in that here was a twelve-year-old girl having to deal with
the suicide of a personal friend of hers, caused at least in part by the baleful
influence of social media.
I don't
know anything about this incident other than what Holly told me. Scientists would call this "anecdotal
evidence" and dismiss it as useless for analytical purposes. But it brings home the diabolical influence
of social media on children in a way that no amount of statistics or studies
have done for me. Somewhere there are
parents of the sixth-grader who committed suicide who will never see their
daughter reach adulthood, get married, or have children of her own. And during the girl's lifetime, because she
was one of the twenty-two million users of Instagram or whatever social media
platform contributed to her death, she enriched Mark Zuckerberg personally by
some amount of dollars he could charge for ads on her phone. I hope he enjoys them now, because he won't
get a chance to enjoy them where he's going.
Holly,
at the tender age of twelve, already seems to have a realistic sense of how
dangerous social media can be. And, Lord
willing, this sense will preserve her from the hazards of using Facebook
products when one is a teenage girl. But
she has all of her teenage years to negotiate ahead of her, and she is not out
of the social-media woods yet.
We live
in an age that is hostile to children and teenagers in many ways. If a child manages to survive the first nine
months of its existence in the womb without being aborted, as about 600,000 children
are each year in the U. S., she or he becomes a kind of hobby that our economy
tolerates but does not encourage—a "lifestyle choice" that burdens
the otherwise ideal worker with expenses and obligations that distract him or
her from being totally devoted to the job and to consumption of products and
services such as Facebook. Upon entering
school, an institution that was formerly safeguarded from commercial
exploitation back in the 1960s when I experienced it, the child becomes the target
of 24/7 ads from streaming services, the various entertainment platforms such
as video games, and eventually from smartphones. Arrayed against each individual child is the
Big Tech oligopoly of world-class expertise that extracts the last drop of
attention with manipulative artificial-intelligence-enhanced algorithms that do
things no ordinary human being can understand, algorithms that can intensify
social interactions into a tornado of abuse that makes death at one's own hand
look like the only alternative.
We
prayed with Holly before she left, for protection from the many dangers that
life as a girl in America presents today.
God is more powerful that Mark Zuckerberg. But Mark Zuckerberg doesn't seem to think so.
Sources: I thank Denyse
O'Leary for drawing my attention to the article "Facebook's . . . Er,
Meta's Instagram Problem" by Heather Zeiger, which appeared at https://mindmatters.ai/2021/12/facebookser-metas-instagram-problem/.
No comments:
Post a Comment