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City Of Trees's avatar

Once I read the "it will remind you to trade soda pop for sparkling water" parenthetical, my skepticism meter spiked, and it never went down throughout reading the article.

Most of us do not adhere to the optimal level of health management, because most of us want to do some things that aren't optimal. I know I have a few myself. (But not swapping out soda pop for sparkling water, I did that many years ago!) Some people do things that are very suboptimal to their own health. I think that that's regrettable, but ultimately it's their body and they're in charge of what they want to do to it.

Now, I don't want to completely downplay the opportunities that can be had with advances in informational medical technology. For those who want to make a concerted effort to improve their health, this could be a useful tool to help them out. But I think there will be plenty of people who just say, "Nah, I want to do this instead because I enjoy it.". I would think that a top tier model would account for this, and try to perhaps find a harm reduction avenue instead, but some still might just want to opt out of the technology altogether and not be bothered with bogging down their notifications further.

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dysphemistic treadmill's avatar

I assume that the conversation with investors goes like this:

“So the user puts in their age and sex. Is that going to give them meaningful health advice?”

“No, no — but then we nudge them to input more personal information — diet habits, sleep, exercise. We offer *personalized* advice!”

“Okay, so does that make them healthier?”

“No, it’s still ineffective. So, we nudge them to put in more personal information— links to medical records, credit card data, dating profiles.”

“And that all makes them healthier?”

“No, no — totally ineffective. And the less it does, the more we nudge them to enter personal information. Look: we’re designing this to make you money. You’re not doing this for your health. “

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