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Stanford Students to Apple: the iPhone Is Too Addictive

A group of Stanford University educatee protestors are urging Apple to do more to curb iPhone addiction.

As the school's student-run paper The Stanford Daily reports, the group—Stanford Students Against Addictive Devices—held a protestation at the Palo Alto, Calif. Apple tree Store over the weekend demanding the Cupertino tech behemothic take iPhone addiction seriously.

"iPhones are our gateway to addictive services (read: Facebook and company), so Apple is uniquely capable of helping united states adjourn our dependence," the group wrote in a flyer they handed out during the sit-in. "Even though Apple's business model does not rely on device addiction, they fail to take common sense steps to address the issue."

The students are urging Apple tree to "include an app with every iPhone that tracks phone usage and clearly reports patterns," offering users "more fine-grained control over their notifications," and "requite users the option to apply their phones in simpler means." Elaborating on that terminal thought, they say Apple should add an "Essential Mode" to iPhones similar to Airplane Mode or Low Power Mode that would offer "merely calls, texts, and photos."

Apple tree did not immediately answer to PCMag'southward request for comment.

The students aren't the merely ones worried about this trouble. A recent survey from nonprofit Common Sense and SurveyMonkey found that 47 pct of parents feel their kid is "addicted" to their mobile device. Thirty-two per centum of those parents said the same nigh themselves.

Meanwhile, a group of onetime Apple, Facebook, and Google employees recently formed an anti-tech habit coalition chosen the Center for Humane Technology, which plans to launch an ad campaign targeted at 55,000 United states public schools.

Stanford Students Against Addictive Devices is advising iPhone-addicted users to track their screen time via the third-political party app Moment and enable grayscale way on their device to "reduce dopamine hits." You tin do that by navigating to Settings > Full general > Accessibility > Display Accommodations > Color Filters. From there just switch Color Filters on and select Grayscale.

About Angela Moscaritolo

Source: https://sea.pcmag.com/news/19937/stanford-students-to-apple-the-iphone-is-too-addictive

Posted by: beaverdonsinout.blogspot.com

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