We Need to Slow Down Communication

From autocomplete email to algorithmic news feeds, technology has turbocharged communication, but meaning and signal is being lost along the way

Evan Selinger
OneZero

--

Illustration: Nicole Ginelli

Co-authored with Clive Thompson

AtAt One Zero, we recently discussed the “efficiency delusion” in tech — the mistaken belief that removing “effort, steps, and hassle” always makes things better. We’re continuing the conversation here by talking about communication. The main question on our minds is this: When should communication be slowed down?

The following is an edited excerpt that captures the flavor of a recent dialog.

Evan Selinger: You recently said something that’s very interesting about how things have changed during the transition from your last book, Smarter Than You Think: How Technology is Changing Our Minds for the Better, to the new one, Coders: The Making of a New Tribe and the Remaking of the World. “The problem is that nobody cares whether or not tech is making us smarter. What they care about is whether tech is making us better — morally better.” Where is this discussion happening?

Clive Thompson: When I’m giving talks now, people are always asking ethical questions about our comportment towards one another. For example, how is…

--

--

Responses (12)