IN THE FUTURE, OUR ATTENTION WILL BE SOLD (9jaflame.tk)
Last
week, I logged onto Facebook to see a story about a man who got drunk,
cut off his friend’s penis and then fed it to a dog. This was followed
by a story of a 100-year-old woman who had never seen the ocean before.
Then eight ways I can totally know I’m a 90’s kid. Then 11 steps to make
me a “smarter Black Friday shopper,” an oxymoron if I ever saw one.
This
is life now: one constant, never-ending stream of non sequiturs and
self-referential garbage that passes in through our eyes and out of our
brains at the speed of a touchscreen.
Last
month, Kim Kardashian “broke the internet.” And by “broke the
internet,” I mean she photoshopped a picture of her bare ass and put it
on a magazine cover.
But,
of course, because it’s a naked ass, and because that ass happens to
belong to Kim Kardashian, the photo was republished umpteen bazillion
times, as adults rolled their eyes and guffawed at the insanity of it
all, while the teenagers giggled and masturbated.1
The
media brought out the obligatory screeds about how lewd or classless
the pictures were. People then complained that the media gives this
woman — a woman who has accomplished nothing in her life other than
being born rich and fucking rappers — way too much airtime. Then people
pointed out that criticizing the media for publicizing Kardashian
ironically just gives Kardashian even more attention
and cultural presence. Being the internet, these people were then
berated for being neckbeard virgins and their mothers were threatened
with sexual violence. The neckbeards then respond by creating ironic
memes that involved Kardashian’s bare ass with an espresso machine.
Everyone LOLZ’d and moves on with their lives.
And this is why she’s still famous.

Kardashian
has come to represent pretty much everything we loathe about the social
media age: bite-sized, meaningless content that you hate looking at,
but for some reason you can’t look away. And because nobody has the
self-control to look away, the bite-sized meaningless content spreads
like wildfire, creating an online experience of a never-ending series of
cultural car wrecks where we all gawk, rubberneck, discuss and/or make
fun of something for 12 minutes until distracted by the next oncoming
collision.
There
are three common complaints against social media and the internet in
general: 1) that it’s making us all narcissistic and shallow,2 2) that it’s crapping on our ability to maintain meaningful relationships and therefore making us lonelier,3 and 3) that it’s interfering with our ability to focus and get quote, unquote “more important shit” done in our lives.4
Interestingly,
after quite a bit of research, it turns out that none of these claims
are completely accurate. Social media doesn’t necessarily cause people
to become more narcissistic, it just gives narcissistic people more
opportunities to indulge their narcissism, and to a larger audience.5 It’s
not interfering with either the closeness we feel to others or how many
people we feel close to, it simply expands our network of casual
acquaintances and the quantity of our casual social interactions.6 And
while technology does present more opportunities for distraction (which
we’ll get to), it also presents easier transmission of information,
tools for collaboration and opportunities for organization.7
What
I’m saying is that the whole “the internet is ruining us” argument is a
big whiff. It’s likely just the anxiety that’s always wrought by new
technologies. When TV and radio were invented, people complained that
everyone’s brain was going to go to mush. When the printing press was
invented, people thought it was going to destroy our ability to speak
eloquently. Complaints about the minds of children being ruined by
technology are as old as technology itself.8
Modern technology isn’t changing us. It’s changing society. There’s a difference. One is how we are,
and one is simply how we react every day to the world around us. The
social media age is changing the basic economics of our day-to-day
lives. It’s changing them in profound ways, ways that most of us likely
don’t notice. And surprisingly, it’s people like Kim Kardashian who are
taking advantage of it.
THE ATTENTION ECONOMY
If you’ve ever spent time in
a really poor country or with people who grew up in awful poverty,
you’ll notice how much they talk about food — their favorite foods, what
they’re going to eat this weekend, how they like this and don’t like
that, and so on.
Much
of these people’s lives and conversations revolves around food for the
simple reason that the scarcity of food makes it appear incredibly
important. The fact you prefer strawberries to oranges matters a lot
when you can rarely afford to have either. But in first-world cultures
where food is never an issue, discussions of food among most people are
superficial and usually over within a few seconds.
For most of human history, the big economic scarcity in the world was land.
There was a limited amount of productive land, therefore there was a
limited amount of food. And because there was a limited amount of food,
most day-to-day economic concerns and political squabbles involved land.
Most people spent their lives contemplating what land they were going
to work, what they were going to grow, what kind of harvest to expect,
and so on. Food was always on the top of people’s mind.9
Eventually,
when the industrial revolution hit, the primary scarcity was no longer
land, as machines could now help cultivate more than enough food for
everybody. Now the big scarcity was labor.
You needed trained people to run all of these machines that did all of
the cool new shit so you could make money and get rich. Thus, for a
couple hundred years, the organizing principle in society was based on
labor — who you worked for, how much you made, and so on.
Then,
in the 20th century, there was more being produced than any one person
would ever need or could ever purchase. The new scarcity in society was
no longer labor or land, the scarcity was now knowledge. People had so many choices of what to purchase with their hard-earned money, but they didn’t know what
to purchase. Thus, people spent most of their day-to-day existence
trying to figure out what the best toothpaste was, what a toaster oven
could do, how to spend their bonus money over the holidays and so on.
The fields of advertising and marketing were invented and came to
dominate society, as they were the means of disseminating the
information people needed to allocate their resources appropriately.
Still with me? Because this is where the internet and smartphones have fucked everything up — or, ahem, where they’ve “disrupted” everything.
With
the advent of the internet, the primary scarcity in society is no
longer information. In fact, there is now more information than any of
us could possibly know what to do with. If you want to know about a new
product, you can have the Wikipedia article and 500 Amazon reviews up
within 10 seconds. If you want a refresher on the process of
photosynthesis, you can have it figured out within a few minutes. If you
need to know every actor Kevin Spacey has ever worked with, you can
figure it out in mere seconds.
The
scarcity in our world is no longer knowledge. There’s an abundance of
knowledge, just as there’s an abundance of labor and an abundance of
land.
No, the new scarcity in the internet age is attention. Since there is a surplus of information, more information flowing through our society than any of us could
ever hope to process or understand, the new bottleneck on our economy
is attention. We now live in an attention-based economy.10
This
is why today we are each bombarded with over 3,000 advertising messages
per day. This is why these advertisements get zanier and more
nonsensical — like the Geico gecko or the Old Spice guy — because the
goal of advertisements is no longer information but simply attention.
This
is why social media is plastered with ridiculous article headlines such
as, “I Thought I Was Going To Die, But Then You’ll Never Believed How
This Polar Bear Saved My Life,” and when you click it, it takes you to a
series of stupid animated GIFs or a YouTube video that has nothing to
do with polar bears but is instead slathered in advertisements.
This
is why politics is becoming less about actual policies and more about
dramatic actions designed to draw either positive or negative attention
to various actors and political parties.11
This
is why everything is becoming a version of softcore porn: music videos,
commercials, movies and reality TV shows. And when it’s not softcore
porn, it’s some other kind of porn: food porn, murder porn, disaster
porn, or actual, like real life porn. Porn gets attention. And today,
attention is what sells.
This
is why Kim Kardashian is famous and has continued to be famous for the
better part of a decade for no other reason than — you guessed it —
she’s already famous! This woman has contributed absolutely nothing to
humanity. Yet in the age of attention, she is goddamned Master Yoda.
She’s got it all figured out.
Kim
Kardashian is a genius. Not an Einstein-like genius. Not a “solves
differential equations in her head but can’t tie her shoes” genius. But
she’s a genius. A savant. She’s like the Rainman of attention whoredom.
The same way an autistic prodigy can count 2,318 toothpicks dumped on
the floor just by looking at them, Kim Kardashian can command the
attention of tens of millions of people with the crack of her ass.
The
quality of that attention doesn’t matter. What matters is the
attention. That attention is an asset, the most valuable asset in the
new economy. Millions of eyeballs follow her wherever she goes and she
leverages the shit out of it. She earns millions off a crappy iPhone app
that does nothing and a TV show that shows nothing. Just the fact she
stands in a nightclub allows that club to charge $2,500 for entry. She
gets paid more for public appearances than Nobel Prize winners. Forbes estimates her income last year at $28 million.

But
making stupid people rich and famous isn’t anything new in our culture.
While the attention economy may exacerbate the problem, it didn’t
create it. But when we apply the attention economy to the other areas of
our lives, we run into some problems.
HOW THE ATTENTION ECONOMY PROMOTES EXTREMISM
Social
networks are the business model of the attention economy. They are
wholly dependent on eyeballs and clicks to make all of their revenue. To
do this, they design algorithms that show you the most interesting and
attention-grabbing information available in your social network. If your
newsfeed was full of the boring and drab day-to-day stuff, you’d stop
looking at it. So instead, Facebook shows you the most extreme
occurrences in your social network for the simple reason that the
extreme events draw the most attention.
This has drastic effects not only on our perceptions of society as a whole, but also on how we perceive our personal lives.
- If it seems like “everybody” is getting married or having kids or having amazing trips around the world or doing something cool and fun and sexy, it’s only because we are exposed to these events in disproportionate numbers. It’s not that everyone is having amazing life experiences all the time, it’s that we’re always shown people’s amazing life experiences all the time. As a result, many of us begin to feel a constant gnaw of somehow “missing out” when really, we just have a heavily-biased perception of what’s going on in our peers’ lives.
- The attention economy rewards people who are narcissistic and self-promotional because these people excel at getting attention. Therefore, it seems that everyone is becoming more shallow and self-absorbed, when in fact, we are merely becoming more exposed to other people’s self-promotion.
- Politically, the most extreme, radical and ignorant views get the most airtime because they’re the most unique and they grab the most attention. Therefore, it appears as if the world is spiraling into a festering shithole, when really, we’re just getting exposed to the people on the fringes more often than ever before.
- Threats such as Ebola or terrorism become sensationalized, not because they’re actually that threatening, but because of their extremity and how much attention they garner. You’re more likely to get eaten by a shark while getting struck by lightning than dying from a terrorist attack. You’re more likely to die from the flu this year than you are from Ebola, ever. Yet, in our culture, it feels as though the world is in a constant state of imminent collapse.
- Pointless but dramatic events such as nipple slips, gaffs, errant interviews, and celebrities doing stupid celebrity stuff seem as though they are taking on a much greater cultural significance than they actually are. If Kim Kardashian got hit by a truck tomorrow and died, I’m sure you’d see the usual media-driven mourn fest and televised funeral, but would anyone really miss her? Would anybody’s life be altered? Probably not. In fact, we’d probably get another really good Kanye album.
When
you look at all of the complaints about social media, smartphones, and
the internet at large, most of the complaints boil down to one thing:
attention. People don’t have any attention span anymore. People don’t
focus on what’s in front of them anymore. People don’t even fucking talk
to you at dinner anymore.

The problem is that the attention economy makes it economical to
spread one’s attention across eight different interests and 23
different friends each day. And because we’re all spreading our
attention so thin, many of us are losing the all-important life skill
of focus.
Focus
is what generates long-term success. Focus leads to deeper and more
meaningful relationships. Focus determines how well we can improve at
something. Yet our current economy is constantly providing incentive
away from focus and towards — whoa, did you see that video of the guy on
the motorcycle who landed on the car? That was crazy!
Anyway,
what was I talking about? Oh yeah… focus. The new age presents problems
of attention, not of happiness or narcissism or loneliness. And as the
technology’s critics point out, this issue is not going to go away, it’s
simply going to get worse.
THE SILENT BENEFITS OF THE ATTENTION ECONOMY
But
the attention economy brings with it a host of social benefits, many of
which are not immediately obvious to us. In fact, some of the benefits
are actually painful to bear in some ways.
Take,
for example, the recent exposure that Bill Cosby is (very likely) a
rapist. This is a man that was a role model for decades and took that
role seriously, traveling around the country lecturing people on values
and responsibilities. Women had been accusing him of rape for years, yet
it was the attention economy that finally allowed the allegations to
make their way into the public consciousness in a significant way.
Pre-internet,
things such as sexual assault or gay rights or intransigent racism or
the failed drug war, they were all abstract concepts that we never had
to confront in any tangible way. They were fairy tales of some far away
land. They had nothing to do with us.
But
new technologies bring these issues right in front of our face, over
and over again, whether we like them or not. Sexual assault does happen
and most of the perpetrators do go unpunished. LGBT people are humans
too, and they deserve to be treated like humans. The drug war is a
dismal failure and ruining millions of people’s lives. And because these
experiences are now easily transmittable and experienced by large
swaths of the population, we see these social policies changing faster
than ever before.
The
past five years has seen a wave of protests and political mobilization,
mostly throughout the developing world. From Egypt to Turkey to Brazil
to Mexico, millions of people are able to react immediately upon major
political issues and demand changes from long-corrupt governments. Sure,
most of them don’t work. But some of them do. And at the least, they
alter the political discourse. Just look at what’s been going on lately
with racism in the US and Ferguson and Eric Garner.
Regardless of what you think, the issue of racism and police brutality
is forced on you. You can’t turn away. There are videos. There are dead
kids. It’s impossible to not see
it, and therefore an issue that has lasted for as long as the country
has existed is being confronted more seriously than it has been in
decades.
But
beyond politics, technology does benefit our relationships, even if we
don’t always recognize it. We are the first generation that is still
within easy contact of old friends from grade school, summer camp and
college. We are capable of being in constant contact with one another,
for better or worse. It’s never been easier to transmit important life
events and emergency situations worldwide. Travel and long distance
relationships — romantic or otherwise — are easier than ever before. One
can spend months or even years abroad and never feel “out of touch”
with what’s going on at home.
Obviously, technology shouldn’t replace face time and in-person interactions. But it can definitely supplement them.
And,
of course, there is simply the breadth of information available at our
fingertips. For all of the headaches the attention economy can cause,
it’s the cost of having limitless information accessible at any time.
You used to have to go to the library to do research. You used to have
to call stores to find out if they had something in stock. You used to
have to buy a map and spend five minutes studying it to figure out where
you wanted to go.
We
forget so easily what the whole point of all of this was in the first
place: the availability of limitless and free knowledge. These benefits
are so widespread and ubiquitous that we can’t even remember what it was like to not have them. And as a result, we overestimate how much these technologies are hurting us and underestimate how much they’re helping us.
Yes,
the attention economy has come with new social challenges like identity
theft and cyber bullying and assholes who text while they drive. But
let’s not throw the baby out with the bath water here.
The problem is not the technology itself, it’s how we choose to use the technology. Is it serving us or are we serving it?
These
are the new challenges new generations must face. Our grandparents had
to learn to master their time and their energy in order to take
advantage of the labor economy. Our parents had to master their minds
and their problem solving in order to take advantage of the knowledge
economy. We must learn to master our focus and our self-awareness to
properly take advantage of the attention economy.
Limitless
access to knowledge brings limitless opportunity. But only to those who
learn to manage the new currency: their attention. In the new economy,
the most valuable asset you can accumulate may not be money, may not be
wealth, may not even be knowledge, but rather, the ability to control
your own attention, and to focus.
Because
until you are able to limit your attention, until you are able to turn
away, at will, from all of the shiny things and nipple slips, until you
are able to consciously choose what has value to you and what does not,
you and I and everyone else will continue to be served up garbage
indefinitely. And it will not get better, it will get worse.
In
the future, your attention will be sold. And it may be that the only
people able to capitalize, are the people that can control their own.
Post a Comment