One thing we don't talk about is that—it's sort of hard to talk about this—our minds
have theses kind of back doors.
There's kind of—if you're human and you wake up and you open your eyes there is a
certain set of dimensions to your experience that can be manipulated.
When I was a kid I was a magician, and you learn all about these limits, that short-term
memory is about this long and there's different reaction times, and if you ask people certain
questions in certain ways you can control the answer.
And this is just the structure of being human.
To be human means that you are persuadable in every single moment.
I mean the thing about magic, as an example, it's that magic works on everybody, sleight
of hand, right?
It doesn't matter what language you speak, it doesn't matter how intelligent you are,
it's not about what someone knows: it's about how your mind actually works.
So knowing this, it turns out that there's this whole playbook of persuasive techniques
that actually I learned when I was at the Stanford Persuasive Technology Lab and that
most people in Silicon Valley in the tech industry learned as ways of getting your attention.
So one example is: we are all vulnerable to social approval.
We really care what other people think of us.
So for example, when you upload a new profile photo of yourself on Facebook, that's a moment
where our mind is very vulnerable to knowing, "what do other people think of my new profile
photo?"
And so when we get new likes on our profile photo, Facebook—knowing this—could actually
message me and say, "oh, you have new likes on your profile photo."
And it knows that we'll be vulnerable to that moment because we all really care about when
we're tagged in a photo or when we have a new profile photo.
And the thing is that they control the dial, the technology companies control the dial
for when and how long your profile photo shows up on other people's newsfeeds, so they can
orchestrate it so that other people more often end up liking your profile photo over a delayed
period of time, for example, so that you end up having to more frequently come back and
see what the new likes are.
And the problem is that they don't do this because they're evil, they do it because,
again, they're in this race for our attention.
And we should also ask, is that necessarily such a bad thing if they're orchestrating
it so that other people like my photo?
I mean that might feel good to me.
So we have to have a new conversation about, as these technology companies use these techniques,
these vulnerabilities in our minds, when is that actually aligned and good for us?
When is that ethical?
When is that honest?
When is that fair?
And when is that dishonest and unfair?
Because they're actually manipulating our minds in a way that doesn't add up to our
spending our time well on the screen.
Well, so another vulnerability in our mind is something called a variable schedule reward,
and that's like a slot machine in Las Vegas.
It turns out that slot machines make more money in the United States than baseball,
movies and theme parks combined.
People become addicted to slot machines, I think it's two to three times faster than
any other kind of gambling in a casino.
So it's insane.
And why is that?
Because it's very simple: you just pull a lever, and sometimes you get a reward and
sometimes you don't.
And the more random it is and the more variable it is the more addictive it becomes.
And the thing is, that that turns our phone into a slot machine, because every time we
check our phone we're playing the slot machine to see "what did I get?"
Every time that we check our email, we're playing the slot machine to see, "What did
I get?
Did I get invited to an interview at Big Think or did I just get another newsletter?"
Or if you're on a dating site like Tindr and when you're swiping, each swipe is: you're
playing the slot machine to see "did I get a match?", I'm playing the slot machine
to see, "did I get a match?"
And the problem is that this dynamic, these variable schedule rewards or this slot machine
mechanic, is so powerful that it's the best thing at addicting people and putting you
in the zone.
One of the original designers of the Facebook newsfeed told me that the thing that made
the newsfeed work at the very, very, very beginning back in 2006 was in part a hardware
innovation.
And I looked at her and I said, "What do you mean?"
And she said it was actually the scroll wheel on a mouse, because with the scroll wheel
on a mouse your hand never had to leave its resting position—you just scroll to see
the next thing.
Because before that you had to click on the down button or move your mouse and drag the
arrow down and scroll the page that way.
When you don't, you can take your two fingers on a track pad and do this, or you can just
scroll on a scroll wheel—it just means your hand never has to leave its resting position,
and it's more like a slot machine: you can just keep swiping and playing just like in
Vegas where there's the button right there.
They actually changed it.
In fact, it used to be a lever, and now it's just a button in Vegas because they found
it's easier just to get people to see if they get a match this way.
So, how much on our phones, when we use our technology, Instagram is like a slot machine?
What's going to come next on the feeds?
Snapchat is a slot machine, each time you see the red notifications and you don't know
what's behind it you're playing the slot machine when you click on it to see "what did I
get?"
And so it's sprinkled all throughout these products because it's a very compelling way
of getting people's attention.
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