Social Media: Enhancer or Disaster?
Updated | By Dorianne Weil & Di Macpherson
The explosive Netflix documentary The Social Dilemma has got the
world talking about how social media has been designed to be extremely
manipulative of its users. Young people are often most affected. Digital
parenting expert, Josh Ramsey, co-founder of
Be In Touch - joins 'DrD' today to unpack some potential, and very practical, solutions for parents.
Social media is here to stay. As parents we try and find some balance
for our kids in this digital age of devices and screens.
But in a world where we are now beginning to understand how manipulative social media can be, what advice can
we offer parents to help avoid and deal with the potentially harmful
effects of social media on our children?
Can social media benefit rather
than cost us? Digital parenting expert, Josh Ramsey, co-founder of Be In Touch - joins 'DrD' Dorianne Weil on JacPod to discuss The Social Dilemma, which looks at the reality of
mass systematic manipulation of human vulnerability by the biggest tech
companies in the world.
"The real goal of social media platforms is not only to get you to become addicted to attention, but it's being addicted to the getting of attention from others. So not only are you addicted to your own interaction with your profile and how many likes that it has, but you're also addicted to the ways in which others are interacting with that platform. So there's more than one layer in which they're getting to compulsively interact with the platform," he says.
It's a must-listen. Click on the play button to listen now, or download it to your computer for later.
In other Thrive with 'DrD' podcasts, the day Daryl Brown decided to take his own life, while living in London
some years back, was the day he felt a sense of relief. Relief that his
depression and suffering would soon be over. Two months later, he found
himself in a London Underground station, waiting for the platform to
clear.
Daryl planned to end his life that day in September
2013 by jumping off that platform, as an Underground train was
approaching. He had told his friends in London that he was returning to
South Africa, and had held a 'farewell' party so he could say goodbye to
them. By that time, Daryl had been suffering from depression for over a decade.
In our Thrive with 'DrD' podcast on JacPod, he shares
his very personal story of deep depression and failed suicide in the London
Underground; of losing both legs - and his subsequent journey from survival
to thrival.
Listen to more podcasts from 'DrD' in the channel below. Or open her channel in your favourite podcast app.
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