The population (especially the younger generation, who never seen a different kind of technology at all) is being conditioned by the tech industry to accept that software should behave like an unreliable, manipulative human rather than a precise, predictable machine. They’re learning that you can’t simply tell a computer “I’m not interested” and expect it to respect that choice. Instead, you must engage in a perpetual dance of “not now, please” - only to face the same prompts again and again.
. Instead, you must engage in a perpetual dance of “not now, please”
For similar reasons the ask not to track verbiage of iphones rubbed me the wrong way.
What’s great about YouTube and other corporate social media is that you can never use it.
I highly recommend that.
I understand that it’s not the “YouTube program” having its own agency and making this decision - it’s the team behind it, driven by engagement metrics and growth targets. But does the average user understand this distinction?
Yes.
What a stupid question. Does the author think that people believe televisions want to sell them things too?