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Intent O.S.'s avatar

Scott, I think this goes deeper than an attention crisis, it’s an infrastructure failure.

We keep blaming platforms for addiction, but they’re doing exactly what they’re designed to do: maximize attention. The real issue is that attention should never have been the foundation layer in the first place.

You’re describing the downstream effects of a system that forces people, especially young people, to navigate life through algorithmic guesswork instead of declared direction.

That’s why everything collapses into the two paths you outlined: play it safe or gamble big. When discovery is broken, those are the only visible options.

The uncomfortable question is this:

What if the next dominant platform doesn’t compete for attention at all?

What if it starts with intent, what people explicitly want, need, or are trying to become, and organizes everything around that signal instead of inferred behavior?

Because right now, we don’t have a content problem or even a motivation problem.

We have a signal problem.

And until intent becomes the primary input layer, we’ll keep producing the exact outcomes you’re calling out, just at larger scale.

The winner of the next decade won’t be the company that captures attention best.

It will be the one that understands intent first.

TomD's avatar

"The bankers in London and New York will be fine, but for millions of kids in emerging markets, studying will cease at sunset.". That pretty much sums up this disaster. The Epstein class as I've heard the .1,% called will get richer. Most of the rest of us will suffer. Bangladesh will be worse than the US but the pain will be felt just as it was when you and I were both teens. A sad scary time

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