Cultivating Digital Well-Being and the Rise of Self-Care Apps

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Abstract

Increasing digital well-being is viewed as a key challenge for the tech industry, largely driven by the complaints of online users. Recently, the demands of NGOs and policy makers have further motivated major tech companies to devote practical attention to this topic. While initially their response has been to focus on limiting screentime, self-care app makers have long pursued an alternative agenda, one that assumes that certain kinds of screentime can have a role to play in actively improving our digital lives. This chapter examines whether there is a tension in the very idea of spending more time online to improve our digital well-being. First, I break down what I suggest can be usefully viewed as the character-based techniques that self-care apps currently employ to cultivate digital well-being. Second, I examine the new and pressing ethical issues that these techniques raise. Finally, I suggest that the current emphasis on reducing screentime to safeguard digital well-being could be supplemented by employing techniques from the self-care app industry.

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APA

Dennis, M. J. (2020). Cultivating Digital Well-Being and the Rise of Self-Care Apps. In Philosophical Studies Series (Vol. 140, pp. 119–137). Springer Nature. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-50585-1_6

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