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by ska
1963 days ago
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I think you miss the point the point I was trying to make (i.e. I didn't articulate it well). Regardless of how trivial you think it is, the fact that so many people demonstrate a preference not to should make you think harder about the problem. It's not just the technology, and many tech people tend to get this wrong consistently. Let's put it another way: if it was actually as trivial as you seem to think, it probably would have happened already. |
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What is the ‘it’ which you imagine people think is trivial?
Who is saying anything is trivial?
Where is anyone saying it’s just technology?
Who said people don’t have a preference to use Facebook?
How do you know how hard people have thought about this?
I don’t think Facebook is trivial to replace, but that isn’t because people are dependent on it in a way that is comparable to the other examples you mentioned.
Unlike the examples you listed, people can easily do without Facebook. There just isn’t much incentive for most people to do so, since they don’t perceive the downsides adequately.