There is a growing generation of adults who have grown up in the digital age, not knowing a life without almost immediate access to a digital connected world. Most adults and children either carry or have access to connected computers, whether they be smartphones, tablets, games consoles, or good old-fashioned PCs, computers have become an essential human tool. Even toddlers seem to have an inherent ability to pick up and use tablet devices to play and learn. While the digital age has brought countless benefits for society, what of the trade-offs in our sleepwalk towards a lifetime dependency on digital technology?
In his book ‘Born Digital’, Bob Wigley shines a light on the darker side of humanity’s relationship with digital technology, pulling out and expanding on the serious issues which are all too often underplayed or brushed aside by a technology distracted and addicted world. Throughout Born Digital Bob cites a series of sobering statistics which brings a reality check in his exploration of the various psychological issues caused by society’s new devotion to digital technology. Indeed, reading Born Digital is a thought-provoking experience, which makes you question whether tech giants, governments, schools, and even yourself as a parent, are doing enough to protect and educate children born into the digital age.
Born Digital is written as a wakeup call to the dangers and the negative outcomes which comes with all our dependency on the digital world, with the book concluding with a call to urgently reset society’s relationship with technology. Tech giants, governments, schools, parents, and each of us must be more informed about the dark side of digital tech, so we can take the necessary steps to better safeguard our society, ourselves, and the next generations from the detrimental side of our relatively newfound digital dependency.
Firstly, I believe improving education is essential, particularly within schools, and at young ages. We cannot count on parents to educate children about digital dangers, as parents tend not to have little understanding of their children’s digital realms. Secondly, there has to be stronger regulation of tech and social media giants, they must be made far more accountable for the digital services they provide, given the profound impact they have, especially on young lives. The ugly truth is social media and big tech companies are highly incentivised to culture addictive habits with their consumers to increase screen time, as more screen time means greater profit through increased advertising revenue. So it is not really in their nature to curtail addictive digital behaviours.
*** This is a Security Bloggers Network syndicated blog from IT Security Expert Blog authored by SecurityExpert. Read the original post at: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/securityexpert/~3/nzNCStxhvzs/book-review-born-digital-by-robert.html
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Book Review: Born Digital by Robert Wigley - Security Boulevard
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