What The Reviewers Say

Positive

Based on 6 reviews

Irresistible: The Rise of Addictive Technology and the Business of Keeping Us Hooked

Adam Alter

What The Reviewers Say

Positive

Based on 6 reviews

Irresistible: The Rise of Addictive Technology and the Business of Keeping Us Hooked

Adam Alter

Positive
Gavin Francis,
The Guardian
The middle part of Alter’s book is illuminating on the ways that designers engineer behavioural addiction. He examines goal-setting, and why users of Fitbits often exercise to the point of injury; the dangers of inconsistent but rewarding feedback (counting those 'likes'); the importance of a sense of progress (such as counting followers, or advancing through a game).
Positive
Tim Wu,
The Washington Post
Alter’s sweep is broad: He includes not just the more obvious addictive technologies such as slot machines and video games, but the whole sweep of social media, dating apps, online shopping and other binge-inducing programs. He takes in everything whose business model depends on being irresistible (which today is most things). If he’s right, most of us are nursing at least a few minor 'behavioral addictions' and perhaps a major one as well. By the end of his enjoyable yet alarming book, you may be convinced that Alter is right and want to seriously rethink the behavioral addictions in your life.
Positive
Barbara Spindel,
The Barnes & Noble Review
...[an] unsettling but riveting book.
Positive
Raymond Pun,
Booklist
Alter deftly profiles the history of addiction, from ancient drugs to today’s Facebook and Instagram, and writes that the current digital era has created an epidemic of technology addiction, describing the challenges these products can pose.
Positive
Fatima Bhutto,
The Guardian
There is a tinge of first world problems in Irresistible. World of Warcraft support groups; a product Alter writes about called Realism; a spike in girl gaming addicts fuelled by Kim Kardashian’s Hollywood app – it’s difficult to see why these things should elicit much sympathy while one in 10 people worldwide still lack access to clean drinking water. This very western focus on desire and goal orientation is one that eastern thinkers might consider a wrong view of the world and its material attachments, but Alter’s pop-scientific approach still makes for an entertaining break away from one’s phone..
Positive
Kirkus
He bolsters such points with sociology and marketing studies, although more focus on the fast-changing technology industry itself would have firmed up his discussion. A clearly written account of a widespread social malady that is sure to gain further attention in coming years..