Former Facebook president Sean Parker admitted to helping create a demon

Sean Parker, Facebook's first president, has a very alarming warning about social networking: 'God knows what it is doing to children's brains'.

Sean Parker, Facebook's first president had a very alarming warning about social networking: 'Only God knows what it is doing to the kids' brains.' Speaking on the news site Axios, he was very frank about what he perceived as a threat of social networking and it is exploiting the human 'weakness'.

Parker has been on Facebook since 2004, when he was less than a year old, he said: 'The thinking process when building such applications, Facebook is the first thing, is' How can we get more? Time and attention as possible? '.

'That means we have to create something that interests you all the time, like when someone likes, comment on your image or post, and that makes you want to contribute more content, then again. More likes and comments. That's a social-validation feedback loop. Exactly what a hacker like me wants to create, because it is exploiting a gap in human psychology. The creator of it, me, is Mark, is Kevin Systrom of Instagram, all understand that, but we still do it, " Parker said.

  1. 9 most important characters in Facebook history
  2. Journey Facebook becomes the world's largest social network

Parler is not the only one in the technology world who is worried about what they create. Tristan Harris, a former Google employee, has also criticized how technology company's products are affecting the user's mind.

'If you are an app, how do you want people to fall in love with you? Turning me into a slot machine, 'he wrote in Medium in 2016.

Former Facebook president Sean Parker admitted to helping create a demon Picture 1Former Facebook president Sean Parker admitted to helping create a demon Picture 1
Are we all addicted to the iPhone slot machine?

Recently, The Guardian had a talk with technology workers and criticized Silicon Valley's business practices.

See more: After 10 years Microsoft invested in Facebook, Facebook is now worth nearly as much as Microsoft

Loren Brichter, a designer of 'pull-to-play machine F5' says: 'I have spent hours, weeks, months, and years thinking about whether the things I am doing have created photos. Whether it is positive for society or humanity '. 'Drag-to-F5 is very addictive. Twitter is very addictive. That's not good at all. '

Roger McNamee, investor of Facebook and Google, said: 'Those who run Facebook and Google are good people, have a strategy with good intentions but lead to unexpected consequences. The problem is that they can't do anything to solve it unless they leave their model. '

4.5 ★ | 2 Vote