Tech addiction: why it matters

The idea of addiction to new technology often leads to polarized debates. In this post I bring attention to both perspectives and ask the question: does it matter how many people are being hurt?

Gaming disorder and proportions

In June of 2018 the World Health Organization added Gaming disorder to 11th Revision of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-11). As WHO describes it:

The symptoms and nuances of addiction

Arguing over whether or not tech addiction is a thing unfortunately misses the point. The phrase “tech addiction” implies that it is a general problem that affects the population as a a whole, but addiction rarely is something that hits the majority. It almost always affects only a small number of people in the larger population. The thing is, even when it affects only a small number of people it can be a huge cost for those individuals, and — when enough people are affected — also impact society as a whole. This is the nature of addictions.

  1. The substance or activity is used in larger amounts or for a longer period of time than was intended.
  2. There is a desire to cut down on use, or unsuccessful efforts to do so.
  3. Pursuit of the substance or activity, or recovery from its use, consumes a significant amount of time.
  4. There is a craving or strong desire to use the substance or engage in the activity.
  5. Use of the substance or activity disrupts obligations at work, school, or home.
  6. Use of the substance or activity continues despite the social or interpersonal problems it causes.
  7. Participation in important social, work, or recreational activities drops or stops.
  8. Use occurs in situations where it is physically risky.
  9. Use continues despite knowing it is causing or exacerbating physical or psychological problems.
  10. Tolerance occurs, indicated either by need for markedly increased amounts of the substance to achieve the desired effect or markedly diminished effect of the same amount of substance.
  11. Withdrawal occurs, manifest either in the presence of physiological withdrawal symptoms or the taking of a related substance to block them.

A minority can be a big deal

As you see, just using the word addiction in debates fails to nuance the problem space. We would sometimes be better off avoiding the word addiction and instead bringing the consideration of severity into the conversation. We could talk about human costs, vulnerability and power of voice.

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Making tech safe and compassionate through design, coaching and teaching. Independent consultant. Co-host of UX Podcast. Primary publication: axbom.com

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Per Axbom

Making tech safe and compassionate through design, coaching and teaching. Independent consultant. Co-host of UX Podcast. Primary publication: axbom.com