The early internet was a promise: infinite knowledge, decentralised learning, and cognitive liberation. What emerged instead was a machine optimised not for thinking but for engagement where human intellect is sliced, sold, and subdued in the name of revenue. The architecture of modern technology, with endless feeds, algorithmic targeting and autoplay loops is not accidental. It is designed to exploit psychological vulnerability.
Modern social media platforms use dopamine-driven design to hijack attention. Infinite scroll mimics slot machines. Likes and notifications exploit social validation loops. Every design decision, from the pull-to-refresh to autoplay, crafted to hijack attention and monetise distraction.
The result is not enhanced productivity or enlightenment but compulsive input, shattered focus, and memory outsourced to the cloud. The smartphone has become the cigarette of the digital age: ubiquitous, addictive, and quietly eroding what makes us human.
And it worked, particularly as attention spans have dropped, screen time has surged past 7 hours a day, and the average person checks their phone over 80 times daily. But the real damage is subtler: the inability to sit still, read deeply, or tolerate boredom, and yet this isn’t a generational quirk: it’s engineered attrition. The user is no longer sovereign. The mind has become an exploited field of data and distraction.
Gen Z: A Controlled Cognitive Experiment
Nowhere is this erosion more visible than in Generation Z. Born into an always connected world, raised on YouTube and increasingly then on TikTok, they are the first full cohort of minds shaped by the algorithm from infancy. Compared to millennials, Gen Z reads less, remembers less, and focuses less. Traditional education systems are buckling under the cognitive shift: teachers report declining concentration, students admit they cannot complete long readings, and memory is replaced by Googling.
The “Google effect” is no metaphor: neuroscience confirms that reliance on external digital memory weakens the hippocampus (the brain’s memory engine). Students now memorise retrieval methods instead of facts. They do not learn; they navigate. But navigation is not knowledge. The brain, like muscle, atrophies when unused. And TikTok accelerates this decay as short-form video rewards instant reaction, not sustained thought, rewiring the brain for constant novelty and punishing slowness. “TikTok brain” is not a media exaggeration but the logical result of a stimulus-delivery system that never asks for patience or depth.
Now, Gen Alpha, raised from birth on tablets, may inherit even less cognitive resilience. Already, studies show increased ADHD-like symptoms linked to early screen exposure in what appears to be engineered decline of their intellective capacity.
The Business of Cognitive Sabotage
Behind this decline lies profit, for the modern digital economy thrives not on knowledge but attention. Every second spent thinking is a second not monetised, as advertising revenue depends on frequency and engagement, not comprehension.
The more fragmented one's thoughts, the more often one will check their feed, for scrolling was designed to remove the natural stop cues that protect human attention, with notifications not as reminders but lures.
The economic logic is simple: distracted people consume more, and the more you consume, the less you think. From a profit standpoint, a focused mind is an obstacle. It questions, critiques, resists. But a distracted mind? That’s perfect: it refreshes the feed, it scrolls.
Even the creators know what they’ve built, as tech executives famously limit their own children’s screen time, and even former Facebook president Sean Parker admitted the platform consumes “as much of your time and conscious attention as possible,” exploiting “a vulnerability in human psychology.” These platforms are not neutral tools but behavioural weapons, finely tuned to short-circuit cognition in the name of growth.
The Fight For The Future of Our Minds
To pretend having surrendered our intellect to devices that entertain more efficiently than we can think is progress is naive, even outright delusional when it produces cognitive euthanasia, administered in pleasurable doses.
But this trend is not irreversible, as neuroplasticity cuts both ways, by rejecting infinite feeds, dopamine rushes and compulsive connectivity, reasserting the dignity of the human person against the use of our minds as commodities to be harvested.
Governments may regulate, designers may adjust, but the first line of defence is individual refusal, for reclaiming attention is not self-help but resistance by saying that mind is not a marketplace and does not belong to the feed.
The machine cannot be reasoned with. But it can be refused practically by silencing notifications, and embracing activities that force our minds to be engaged and to be bored, which is where thought begins. Because if we do not, the future will not belong to thinkers, but to fragments to be data-harvested.
Statement
We were promised knowledge, we got brainrot instead. The digital revolution has not augmented thought but atomised, distracted, and monetised it. Gen Z stands as proof: less focus, less memory, more compulsion. This is not the evolution of intelligence but its engineered decline, designed to maximise profit through cognitive exploitation. We scroll, we forget, we obey the feed. And unless we reject this system and we reclaim our attention span, we will become the first civilisation to digitise itself into idiocy.