Human Fracking? The Attention Liberation Movement vs. Big Tech
FEB 13, 202657 MIN
Human Fracking? The Attention Liberation Movement vs. Big Tech
FEB 13, 202657 MIN
Description
Writer’s Voice: compelling conversations with authors who challenge, inspire, and inform.
Episode Summary
Something feels wrong with our attention — and with reality itself.
In Attensity! A Manifesto of the Attention Liberation Movement, editors D. Graham Burnett, Alyssa Loh, and Peter Schmidt argue that this crisis is not about individual willpower. It’s about a multi-trillion-dollar industry built to monetize human attention.
They call it “human fracking.”
“These phones are the final node in a… $7 to $14 trillion industry that’s all about maximizing the amount of time that we engage with these devices… capturing our attention and turning it into money. And we call that ‘human fracking.’” — Peter Schmidt
In this conversation, we explore how the commodification of attention reshapes nearly every aspect of our lives.
We talk about attention as relational and ethical — not just measurable. And we examine why reclaiming attention must be a collective political movement, not a private detox.
Then, we listen to an excerpt from our 2025 conversation with Cory Doctorow about his book Enshittifcation.
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Tags: Attention Liberation Movement, Attensity book, D. Graham Burnett, Peter Schmidt, Alyssa Loh, human fracking, attention economy, digital capitalism, social media harm, attention activism, Cory Doctorow enshittification, attention sanctuaries, Writers Voice podcast
You may also like: Cory Doctorow, Enshittification, Cory Doctorow, Picks and Shovels
Read The Transcript
Segment Summary
The Crisis of Attention
Why attention is “the key question of our moment”
The metaphor of “human fracking”
The internal environmental crisis of the mind
Attention as World-Making
Attention as relational and ethical
Simone Weil and the spiritual dimensions of attention
How degraded attention makes reality feel unreal
Movement, Not Detox
Converting private shame into collective anger
Why willpower isn’t enough
Parallels to environmental and civil rights movements
Sanctuaries of Attention
Study, organizing, sanctuary
Libraries, classrooms, coffee shops, Sabbath
Reimagining civic institutions as attention infrastructure
A Positive Vision
Designing technologies for human flourishing
What a liberated attentional world might feel like for the next generation
Listen to or Read a Sample from the book
Read the Poem: St. Francis and the Sow