--- title: "The case for dopamine dispensers" subtitles: "Likes and clicks and green badges and comments and analytics and ____ can be helpful, actually" author: ["Amolith"] cover: ./cover.png published: 2023-02-26T23:09:00-05:00 categories: ["Technology"] tags: ["TODO"] draft: true toc: false --- Dopamine dispensers --- likes on social media platforms, stars on GitHub, clicks on your website, etc. --- are inherently damaging and lead only to addiction ... is what I used to say. Lately, I've begun thinking otherwise. They absolutely are dangerous and can promote harmful behaviour, _but in moderation_, I believe that they can be quite helpful. [pra]: /privacy-respecting-analytics/ There are a few examples I often see vilified and I'll address each one: - Social media "likes" (fediverse favourites, Reddit upvotes, etc.) - GitHub stars - Website views # Software development - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=31963467 - https://ntietz.com/blog/moving-off-github/ - https://lists.sr.ht/~sircmpwn/sr.ht-discuss/%3CF98B7AC8-6EAF-4884-9C3B-DA3711BE7085%40traduction-libre.org%3E#%3CCBMEJKAUK9CL.34S27FE2XA4G0@taiga%3E - https://www.coss.community/cossc/ocs-2020-breakout-drew-devault-4407 - https://drewdevault.com/2019/05/24/What-is-a-fork.html # Website traffic # Social media This is perhaps the more dangerous