A
Monster Id of self-reinforcing perverse incentives is gathering
strength with every click, every data point collected and every
unseen algorithmic adjustment of the addictive dosage.
Much of
what we rightly decry as dysfunctional is the result of perverse
incentives built into systems not from malice but from the
self-reinforcing nature of self-interest: whatever mechanisms serve
self-interest are reinforced by those benefiting the most from their
institutionalization as "the way the world works."
What
started out as of self-evident utility--for example, fee for service
healthcare - slowly transmogrified from a common-sense model of
modest costs into a monstrous industry with an insatiable appetite
for revenues, profits and the political influence needed to further
its permanent expansion.
Though the system goes by the same
name--fee for service--it bears no resemblance to its initial
incarnation. The mechanisms of self-enrichment now dominate the
entire system via the perverse incentives that have been codified by
regulations and institutionalized in vast corporate cartels.
This
same self-reinforcing progression from a modest model with promise to
a corporate-dominated monstrosity that enriches the few at the
expense of the many has now reached its perverse-incentives
perfection in the media, from mainstream to social media.
The
Web as a means of distributing content to every user started with
decentralized, self-organizing mechanisms such as bulletin boards and
web-hosting of websites and blogs. The machinery of generating
revenue was limited to display adverts. Search was organic, meaning
search engines were designed to crawl the Web and return the most
relevant external links as search results.
The advent of
online auctions for key words and search placement (Overture et al.)
transformed search from an organic service funded by display adverts
to a vast revenue generation machine powered by auctioning search
placement to the highest bidders.
With the introduction of
centralized social media platforms, the Web's center of gravity
shifted from self-organizing message boards, commercial sites and
wildly diverse blogs unaffected by centralized surveillance,
monitoring and censorship via ill-defined community standards to a
model of users generating content for free while the revenues
generated by collecting and selling users' data flow to the corporate
owners of the platform.
An insignificant percentage of this
vast flow of revenues is distributed to a tiny sliver of users who
manage to attract millions of views / listens, i.e. engagement. For
example, content creators who pile up one million views earn a
magnificent $10 for their ceaseless efforts in promoting the content
enriching the corporate owners of the social media platforms.
Where
advertising networks once paid a meaningful share of display advert
revenues to the sites that hosted the ads, once Big Tech gained
centralized, network-effects dominance, these revenues dwindled to
insignificance for all but the handful of sites with massive
audiences. Most of the advert revenue is collected by the search and
social media platforms which now dominate user content creation and
engagement.
This arrangement is fueled by radically perverse
incentives for all participants. The content creators are
incentivized to post the most "engaging" content, which due
to human nature tends to be sensationalized, exaggerated,
emotion-triggering content that is indistinguishable from propaganda,
misinformation and slop.
AI has incentivized the reach by
content creators for higher revenues via posting ever greater volumes
of videos, audio and text content. As it becomes harder to
distinguish authentic content from AI slop, the platforms' overall
content is inevitably degraded / debauched.
The platforms have
every incentive to increase the addictive powers of their algorithms
and the content generated by users, as the greater the user
engagement, the more data they can collect and sell--and use to
tailor what's delivered to individual users to maximize their
profits.
Faced with this endless spew of intentionally
addictive, sensationalized Ultra-Processed content, mainstream media
outlets have increased the density of their display adverts to the
point that it's no longer worth the effort required to scroll through
ads to find the content, which has also been sensationalized to
compete with the content posted on social media by users desperate to
expand their own audience by any means available - including slop of
every description.
These perverse incentives have created a
media monster, seeking revenues and profits not by creating content
of self-evident value (what was labeled DBI in the traditional media
- dull but important) but by following social media down the wormhole
of sensationalized click-bait, "lifestyle" fluff and
"sponsored content," i.e. promotional content commercial
interests pay to place in high-visibility niches folded into other
content.
The traditional media prided itself on maintaining
implicit standards of integrity and objectivity in reporting. These
standards have largely been abandoned or debauched in favor of raw
partisanship or click-bait sensationalism. As circulation and advert
revenues decline, traditional media has responded by segmenting
content subscriptions to milk more income out of subscribers: want to
read the sports section? That's an extra subscription now.
In
effect, a Monster Id of self-reinforcing perverse incentives is
gathering strength with every click, every data point collected and
every unseen algorithmic adjustment of the addictive dosage. As
longtime correspondent Peter K. noted, sensationalism, certainty and
grandiose claims of hidden / profound insight all scale, as these
activate our hard-wired attention receptors.
Not only are
these exaggerations of marginal value; they actively misdirect and
scatter our attention, fragmenting our capacity to make sound
assessments and focus on matters of actual importance in planning and
organizing our own lives.
Honest expressions of uncertainty
and careful reporting of complex issues don't scale.
Fostering
addictions to endless scrolls of slop to maximize profits is--like a
"health" system dominated by SickCare / Ultra-Processed
Food cartels--the worst of all possible worlds, a world devoid of any
redeeming value.
I have been a content creator / writer since
1988, and I've experienced every step of this devolution, from the
good old days of free-lancing for mainstream media newspapers and
journals with the entire Gatekeeper machinery of editors, pitches,
invoices, etc., to the Wild-West early Web of blogs and independent
ad-funded journalism, to the domination of search and social media
platforms and the present near-total reliance of creators on
subscribers and the sales of content directly to the public.
I
haven't changed my content, even though I recognize my niche doesn't
scale, and will never scale. I'm adapting to changes in distribution,
but I'm sticking with standards that enable integrity and pride in my
work. If this dooms me (and other creators like me) to permanent
marginalization, so be it, because playing to "win" as
measured by money in a realm ruled by perverse incentives is in
effect selling your soul.
Any mention that souls can be
nurtured by integrity or squandered for lucre dooms one to a lean-to
hovel in Digital Siberia, for anything other than focusing on
maximizing profits by any means available is now considered an
incomprehensible form of insanity.
by Charles Hugh Smith at oftwominds.com on March 6, 2026
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