This anti-doomscrolling website by Ben Grosser, an artist and professor at the University of Illinois, is intended to raise awareness about personal habits on social media during troubling times. For those who are not familiar with the term, doomscrolling is "a practice of surfing or scrolling through bad news headlines on the Internet, even if those stories create unpleasant or unhealthy feelings."
The anti-doomscrolling website is aptly called The Endless Doomscroller. The page is designed to specifically look like a common social media platform. However, the platform does show an "infinite scroll of generic, troubling headlines." From "Fear Persists" to "The Threat Is Existential," the headlines are by no means real. What Grosser is trying to do is spotlight the bad habit of doomscrolling and engage individuals in discourse about it.
Anti-Doomscrolling Websites
The Endless Doomscroller Seeks to Engage People with Awareness
Trend Themes
1. Anti-doomscrolling Tools - Disruptive innovation opportunity to develop apps and software that can limit negative news exposure and promote positive content consumption.
2. Digital Well-being Awareness - Disruptive innovation opportunity to create education programs, workshops, and services that promote healthy technology usage.
3. Social Media Platforms Innovations - Disruptive innovation opportunity to integrate features that discourage doomscrolling and promote positive interactions among users.
Industry Implications
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2. Education - Educational institutions and edtech companies can offer digital well-being workshops and courses to promote healthy technology usage and mindfulness.
3. Media - Media companies and journalism organizations can promote constructive journalism and ethical reporting practices to limit the spread of negative news and misinformation.