The internet is broken. Or at least sometimes it seems to be. I've figured out that I need to play by the algorithm's rules if I want to control what my feeds look like. If I happen to watch a video on ravers the internet thinks I want to see them all the time. If I like and comment on something, similar things will appear. This secret force assumes that if I liked and commented once it means that I want to see and interact with more of this in the future. The only problem with this paradigm is that it makes the internet reward extremes. If you're driving and you see a car crash you look, you can't help it, but you look. We all do. But that doesn't meet we want to see more car crashes or that we want to meet another car crash at the same time every day. But maybe it's not the internet that's problem, maybe the internet is just one big mirror for our mind. We can't just rely on the internet to show us enlightened things, we need to be an active player in the online world and take responsibility for our viewing habits. In other words, the world you see online is a reflection of the world you see in your own mind. I have a little trick: I double click on things I find inspiring and lovable. And lots of dogs. Now, when I open my apps my online world is a warm fuzzy place. Yes, I'm consciously creating a bubble. But it's a conscious creation. And it's mine. I'm actively aware of it. And what's better? Letting my random likes and dislikes filter through a software designed to favor extremes show me the most commented. I want the middle way. I want peace, joy, tranquility. I think twice before commenting and liking on a dramatic car crash of a post. I have enough drama in my own mind, in my own life. I loved when the online world was a true chronological feed of people you chose to follow, not a computer generated pile of the noisiest, loudest screamers out there. And if I'm going to look at a bunch of posts and stories and live broadcasts I want to be an active, conscious player in the choosing of what that content is. One of the greatest dangers is an untrained mind. Unleash that on the internet with billions of people and it only get magnified tenfold.

kinoyogaさん(@kinoyoga)が投稿した動画 -

キノ・マクレガ―のインスタグラム(kinoyoga) - 6月2日 04時49分


The internet is broken. Or at least sometimes it seems to be. I've figured out that I need to play by the algorithm's rules if I want to control what my feeds look like. If I happen to watch a video on ravers the internet thinks I want to see them all the time. If I like and comment on something, similar things will appear. This secret force assumes that if I liked and commented once it means that I want to see and interact with more of this in the future. The only problem with this paradigm is that it makes the internet reward extremes. If you're driving and you see a car crash you look, you can't help it, but you look. We all do. But that doesn't meet we want to see more car crashes or that we want to meet another car crash at the same time every day. But maybe it's not the internet that's problem, maybe the internet is just one big mirror for our mind. We can't just rely on the internet to show us enlightened things, we need to be an active player in the online world and take responsibility for our viewing habits. In other words, the world you see online is a reflection of the world you see in your own mind. I have a little trick: I double click on things I find inspiring and lovable. And lots of dogs. Now, when I open my apps my online world is a warm fuzzy place. Yes, I'm consciously creating a bubble. But it's a conscious creation. And it's mine. I'm actively aware of it. And what's better? Letting my random likes and dislikes filter through a software designed to favor extremes show me the most commented. I want the middle way. I want peace, joy, tranquility. I think twice before commenting and liking on a dramatic car crash of a post. I have enough drama in my own mind, in my own life. I loved when the online world was a true chronological feed of people you chose to follow, not a computer generated pile of the noisiest, loudest screamers out there. And if I'm going to look at a bunch of posts and stories and live broadcasts I want to be an active, conscious player in the choosing of what that content is. One of the greatest dangers is an untrained mind. Unleash that on the internet with billions of people and it only get magnified tenfold.


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