硅谷精英们竟然禁止自己的子女用屏幕产品
The people who are closest to a thing are often the most wary of it. Technologists know how phones really work, and many have decided they don't want their own children anywhere near them. A wariness that has been slowly brewing is turning into a regionwide consensus in Silicon Valley: The benefits of screens as a learning tool are overblown, and the risks for addiction and stunting development seem high. Tim Cook, the CEO of Apple, said earlier this year that he would not let his nephew join social networks. Bill Gates banned cellphones until his children were teenagers, and Melinda Gates wrote that she wished they had waited even longer. "On the scale between candy and crack cocaine, it's closer to crack cocaine," Chris Anderson, the former editor of Wired, said of screens. "We thought we could control it. But it's beyond our power to control. This is going straight to the pleasure centers of the developing brain." John Lilly, a Silicon Valley-based venture capitalist with Greylock Partners and the former C.E.O. of Mozilla, said he tries to help his 13-year-old son understand that he is being manipulated by those who built the technology. "I try to tell him somebody wrote code to make you feel this way -- I'm trying to help him understand how things are made, the values that are going into things and what people are doing to create that feeling," Mr. Lilly said. |