קראו את הקטע וענו על השאלות: כלכלת תשומת הלב ומחיריה
When access to an online service is free, the transaction has not disappeared; it has merely been disguised. The user pays in attention, which platforms harvest, package, and auction to advertisers in milliseconds. This business model, often summarized as the attention economy, has consequences that extend well beyond marketing. Because revenue scales with engagement, the systems that decide what we see are tuned not for accuracy or for our long-term satisfaction but for whatever keeps us scrolling, and decades of psychological research suggest that outrage, novelty, and anxiety perform splendidly on that metric. Critics of this critique, it should be said, make serious points. Moral panics about new media are as old as the printing press, and blaming algorithms can conveniently excuse the human appetites they serve; the tabloid newspaper discovered the commercial value of indignation long before the smartphone. Yet there is a meaningful difference of degree. A newspaper editor selected sensational stories once a day; a recommendation system runs millions of experiments per hour on each user, personalizing the provocation. Regulators have begun to respond, with proposals ranging from transparency requirements to outright bans on engagement-based ranking for minors. Whether legislation can move faster than product design remains, for now, an open wager.
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