Your heuristic for getting the news checks out in my experience, so that seems worth trying.
I wouldn’t be surprised if we’ve both seen plenty of Snowden/NSA on Hacker News.
Thanks for the links.
And while I agree with you that quitting the news would likely be intellectually hygienic and emotionally healthy, it would probably also work as an anti-akrasia tactic in the specific case of cutting out something I often turn to to avoid actual work. Similar to the “out of sight, out of mind” principle, but more “out of habit, out of mind”.
cutting out something I often turn to to avoid actual work
Mainstream news are a dopamine loop magnified by an intermittent reinforcement schedule. You keep clicking for more and checking the sources every 10 minutes. Plus you can’t break out of the loop intellectually because the news content switches you from the ‘intellectual mode’ into the ‘tribal mode’ or even the ‘imminent danger’ mode. In the absence of mainstream news, technical news alone were never that addictive to me.
Your heuristic for getting the news checks out in my experience, so that seems worth trying.
I wouldn’t be surprised if we’ve both seen plenty of Snowden/NSA on Hacker News.
Thanks for the links.
And while I agree with you that quitting the news would likely be intellectually hygienic and emotionally healthy, it would probably also work as an anti-akrasia tactic in the specific case of cutting out something I often turn to to avoid actual work. Similar to the “out of sight, out of mind” principle, but more “out of habit, out of mind”.
Mainstream news are a dopamine loop magnified by an intermittent reinforcement schedule. You keep clicking for more and checking the sources every 10 minutes. Plus you can’t break out of the loop intellectually because the news content switches you from the ‘intellectual mode’ into the ‘tribal mode’ or even the ‘imminent danger’ mode. In the absence of mainstream news, technical news alone were never that addictive to me.