The definition of a modern monster would be someone who preys on others while assuming a concealed identity while doing the act of one. It may not seem like everyone or everything be considered a monster, but people have their limits and guidelines where certain things like cell phone companies can be showed to people who they truly are in fact. Cell phone companies are the modern monsters in today’s society we live in. Cell phones are inadvertently controlling our lives every day with the way we communicate with one another socially. In the technology industry part of society, cell phone companies are the biggest modern monsters we deal with every day. Technology is a vast field of growing opportunities where people can strive to earn a …show more content…
The evidence speaks for itself when compared to other companies all around the world. Some of the differences when United States compared to other countries, in the end the other might not stack up because of the infrastructure United States has currently. The companies do not pay attention to little details on how cell phones can affect social skills; “cell phone addiction may become more widespread as greater numbers of children are using cell phones” (Stewart). Even children are having access to devices that normally teens and adults normally use. When someone is depended on a device more than a person is, it can lead to dwindling social skills and dependency on gadgets to fill an emptiness inside them. Addictions and social problems are just two factors that can affect a person’s life overall. Phone addiction is similar to drugs or alcohol because the brain and body are trained to survive on the daily consumption, without it, the person seems lost and not able to do anything until getting the phone back. Companies, like the big phone ones, need to come up with a better way to support the consumer and then worry about the money, contracts, hidden up-front costs later. The plan is running so far, but if it was improved, a significant number of problems would be more efficient and these companies do not realize it because they want to minimize costs and maximize profits. Phones are not the modern monster; it is the companies and the policies they
“The digital revolution has clearly produced a large number of innovative products and services. Some of them have become multibillion pound companies and transformed a significant part of our lives” (Document 9). “Technology deserves some credit for lifting the institutional and bureaucratic barriers that often limit creative talent. In any area of creativity, creative products tended to be judged mostly by formal experts on the subject-matter. And as sensible as their views might be, they will also be affected by biases, politics and errors of judgment” (Document 9). All of this, when you boil it down means that cellphones are useful tools and should be treated as such and otherwise maximize your
* Its so-called innovative or revolutionary products do not gain the company as much credits as Samsung or Apple does. The market will test its ability to
Technology has made many advancements through the past few years. Cellphones particularly have become more advanced and popular. These electronic devices have granted access to an endless amount of resources you can use to simplify your everyday life. However, the technological upgrades in cellphones have also provoked an addiction to the excessive use of this electronic. The cellphone addiction has become very common among many people especially the younger generations. This addiction compared to other addictions might seem harmless however, its side affects can be very serious and shouldn’t be overlooked. Throughout, my research I have discovered how a cellphone addiction negatively effects your physical, social, and mental health. Effectively demonstrating how dangerous a cellphone addiction can be to the individuals who suffer it.
When children at a young age have cell phones it brings on many problems. Children will start to spend more time on their phone than they do with their family or friends. As it says in a news report by the Chicago Tribune, “A recent report by Common Sense Media, a nonprofit group that helps families navigate issues related to media and technology, showed mobile screen time on the rise for children 8 and younger.”(George). The quote provides information about how children are starting to spend more time on their phone. With children spending more time on their phone they are starting to become unsocial and are losing or not even making personal relationships with people. Some may argue giving a child can help them to be more social. These people say this because they can communicate
- The Threat of Substitutes is high, since mobile product-life cycles are short. For example, Motorola is currently
Mobile phone dependence now is a common problem, people in every age level have his or her own smart phone which can connect to the internet.In the street, almost all people are checking the social app on their phone. “People use phone to interact with each other instead of talking face to face” (Campbell, 2015, p4-5). Benefiting by Internet, people can talk to others in a convenient way;however, that really reduce the chance that to face communication. Many people choose to send messages and mails rather than to talk about embarrassing or emotionally difficult situations,this circumstance will impact on their ability to communicate with each other. Otherwise, after owning a phone, “Students may become less self-reliant” (Campbell, 2015, p8). Students in school usually use phone to call their parents to solve school problems like forgetting to take something, that makes them too rely on their parents. What’s more, some students
Cell phones and the computers are similar to each other in many different ways. One of the most common similarities is the internet aspect. With everyone connected to the internet, the adverse effects can spread throughout like a virus. “A Nielsen study released in 2010 indicated that texting was the primary reason for purchasing mobile phones and that text communication had become a "’centerpiece of mobile teen behavior.’" The modern smartphone of the 2010s is a powerful computing device, and the rapid and ongoing development of new applications provides users with a growing number of ways to use mobile phones for recreation, productivity, and social communication” (Issitt 2016). In the following Issitt states, “however, as smartphones have become more common, concerns about the detrimental effects of smartphone use have also increased.” (Issitt 2016). Issitt expresses the large growth of people with smartphones has its positives and negatives. The positives being the ability to communicate, but the negative being the effects on relationships with one another. An example of the negative side of things is the lack of interaction with people. People are more likely to call or text instead of interacting with one another. The lack of interaction can ruin relationships, or make people feel unwanted. In the article “Eurasian Journal of Educational Research,” the writer states that the internet, “can transform into an addictive instrument in excessive usage situations.” (Gunduz 2017). The statement explains the issue of the unnecessary use of the internet as a growing addictive process that is taking over more and more
Cell phones are affecting the lives of people in a negative way. People have begun to rely solely on the technology that has been created rather than picking up a book or finding answers the old-fashioned way. A major issue that has occurred because of cell phones is the lack of social skills in most nearly all individuals. Cell phones have greatly shaped society and destroyed face to face social skills. People pick up their phones and send a text rather than going to speak to a person. “According to an article in the Huffington Post, children do not know how to handle face-to-face conflict because so much of their interactions occur through some sort of technology…. Cell phones are now preventing these social skills from being taught because children are too caught up in technology than the real world.”(Hyman) When growing up, most children are taught how to make friends, but now children are growing up with the access to technology which has a great impact in shaping the social skills of children. “Young adults also use text messaging as their primary method of contacting friends – over 80 percent report texting as their preferred method.”(Voegeli). Young adults and even older adults have developed an addiction to their cell phone. Cell phones do make it easier to contact people, but they make social skills in individuals dissipate. People are attached to their phones like it is a part of their body. Technology like the cell phone has taken a toll on everyday life events. People cannot even sit in a room with their family without being on their phones. In most cases, they would rather text one another instead of having a conversation. Society needs to
Believing that addictions to cell phones are becoming increasingly realistic, he surveyed 164 college undergrads and discovered that “cell-phones [had] become inextricably woven into our daily lives — an almost invisible driver of modern life.” This information shows that as more and more people are becoming avid users of cell phones, the harder it is growing to put them down. In the future, researchers like Roberts are developing machines to see whether or not an “addiction” to cell phones is a diagnosable condition. Researchers in the U.K. studied 1,529 teenaged students and categorized around 153 as “problematic users" of cell phones. All of this leads to the ultimate conclusion, which is that cell phones can be an addiction. The author clearly proves her point by showing how research has backed up her opinion, and she believes that this sort of addiction can be diagnosable in the future
Technology separates people because it nurtures addictions. For example, in her CNN article, Sandee LaMotte says that the overuse of cell phones has made people addicted to them, and as a result, has negatively affected people’s relationships with friends and family. Specifically, she says that people can get ‘nomophobia’ characterized by anxiety when they don’t have their phone on them. This can cause depression, which in turn distracts people, and affects relationships, because no one wants to have face-to-face conversations. LaMotte quotes Caglar Yildirim, who created a scale to test addiction ‘ “[Overuse of phones] might negatively affect your social life and relationships with friends and family," [...] those who score high on the test tend to avoid face-to-face interactions, have high levels of social anxiety and maybe even depression” ’ LaMotte believes that addiction to phones can reduce physical time with other people, to an extent at which it can harm relationships, and slowly tear people apart. In another example, in her 2011 social media article, Deborah Mackey that addiction to phones and social media can limit the amount of time people spend with each other. Mackey states that a large percent of people use their phones while with friends or family, and many even use their phones at meal times.
About 91 percent of the US population has a mobile phone. Given that fact, more than nine out of ten people reading this essay own a mobile phone. In 2000, only about 53 percent of the US population owned a mobile phone. The use of the telephone just keeps on rising, and it is very hard to tell if it will ever stop. For many, they have never known a time without cell phones. The phone has changed over time and has revolutionized the way we live. Therefore, it is very important that everyone becomes more educated on the topic. In particular, it is important to learn about the history of the phone, inventors who have contributed to the phone, and how the phone has lead to controversies in today’s society.
Why is it that people use their phones wherever they go? In this article, Heid (2016) reports that people are either addicted to their phones or they overuse it. As people, we are heavily depended and addicted to our phone. The smartphones are seen everywhere, but where does the line between addicted and overuse actually go? In this summary I will portray some effects the mobile phone has on people and why we are so affected.
The U.S. cell phone industry quietly launched in 1983 as an exclusive product targeting affluent professionals with $3,995 of disposable income to spend on a cell phone (Wolpin, 2014). While sales exceeded the industry’s initial projections due to an unanticipated ‘cool factor’ associated with having a cell phone, sales were pedestrian due to a limited number of cell phone providers selling the service in major metropolitan areas. Therefore, the industry slowly grew to 340,000 subscribers by 1985 (CTIA, 2016). In 1992, with the advent of 2 year service contracts, cell phone service providers began selling cell phones for a penny to accelerate adoption of the technology. Subsequently, by the end of 1995, the number of cell phone subscribers
Technology has become a great benefit to us but many people have taken it too far. According to researcher and surveys taken all over the world shows that a large number of people may have become addicted to their technological devices and are not able to make it through a day without their cell phones or other technological devices. Many have concerns that people would rather use these devices than to have a face to face conversation. The addictions of technological devices are on the rise. Although these devices were meant to make our lives easier there have been many problems to arise ranging from health risk, relationship problems, classroom, church, and work interferences. Statistics show that cell
The effects of technology on society will always be a double edged sword. The debate is a never ending one, in which both sides have valid and compelling arguments. The Industrial Revolution reduced manual labor in the long run, but had negative consequences such as child labor and sweatshop conditions. Nuclear Power reduces the cost of producing energy, but raises serious environmental issues like pollution and radiation. In this day in age refusing to assimilate to at least some form of modern living is simply not an option. One invention causing controversy today that has yet to cease being alter, modified, and “improved” since its debut is the ever present cell phone.