TheJakartaPost

Please Update your browser

Your browser is out of date, and may not be compatible with our website. A list of the most popular web browsers can be found below.
Just click on the icons to get to the download page.

Jakarta Post

Your Internet addiction could help when it comes to World War III

I spend so much time on the Internet that Amazon

Nury Vittachi (The Jakarta Post)
Bangkok
Sun, December 21, 2014

Share This Article

Change Size

Your Internet addiction could help when it comes to World War III

I

spend so much time on the Internet that Amazon.com has replaced its '€œYou May Also Like'€ recommendations list with a pop-up note saying: '€œTurn this off and go for a walk, you fat lazy slob.'€

It'€™s hard to get us 21st century people, especially males, off our screens. Our wives sometimes try to get us to move using the trendy word '€œYolo'€, which stands for You Only Live Once. But this doesn'€™t work in Asia, where most people believe in reincarnation. '€œStop bugging me, I'€™ll log off and do something in my next life.'€

I began to realize just how serious a web-surfer I was when I detected three signs of being a net junkie: 1) The links on every webpage on the whole Internet are dark red which means you'€™ve clicked them before. 2) Your entire '€œbest friends'€ list is people you'€™ve never met. 3) Your '€œbookmarks'€ list is longer than an actual book.

Of course, I myself am not a problem addict, although I must admit, during my brief visits to the real world, I spend an inordinate length of time annoyed that real life doesn'€™t have a '€œback'€ button. Massive design oversight there.

If you do have an Internet addiction, a service set up just for you is netaddictionrecovery.com. Yes, it'€™s online. My wife thinks that camps to beat web addiction should be physical places. True, but who'€™s going to go to them unless they have Wi-Fi?

The odd thing is that sitting looking at a screen is strangely exhausting. I saw a news report recently about a flight in Wuhan, central China, which couldn'€™t land for 30 minutes because air traffic controllers had fallen asleep at their screens. The report didn'€™t say how they eventually managed to wake them, but I suspect the Boeing 737 '€œbuzzed'€ the window of the airport control tower with the pilots hanging out of the cockpit windows shouting: '€œHey! Wakey-wakey.'€

The same week, there was a newspaper story about a guy who hijacked a night flight in France to take him to Geneva. The French air force had to escort it because the entire Swiss air force had gone home. Switzerland has a longstanding '€œwe'€™re not playing'€ policy on wars, so they clearly haven'€™t internalized the fact that military action is not a nine-to-five thing. World War III'€™s going to be interesting. '€œGute nacht, esteemed enemy combatants, it'€™s five o'€™clock, time to go home to relax with a plate of raclette and some online extreme yodeling videos. See you tomorrow!'€

My hope is that whoever organizes world wars will delay the start of the next biggie until the whole thing can be fought in Minecraft world or SimCity. Then all those hours I'€™ve '€œwasted'€ can be put to good use.

Until then, the good news is that human society is adjusting to the existence of screen addicts. In Chongqing, China, someone has painted markings on the pavement to create a slow lane for people who walk while staring at phones. Actually, I suspect some sort of '€œChongqing Association of Snatch-Thieves'€ has painted those lines for their own convenience.

Should one risk it? Sure. You only live once. Or twice. Or thrice.

________________

The writer is a columnist and journalist

Your Opinion Matters

Share your experiences, suggestions, and any issues you've encountered on The Jakarta Post. We're here to listen.

Enter at least 30 characters
0 / 30

Thank You

Thank you for sharing your thoughts. We appreciate your feedback.