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Technology and connection

Technology can connect us. It can also, in its current dominant forms, make us profoundly lonelier. The question is which one it is doing in your life.

The answer to whether technology connects us is not simple. It depends on which technology, used how, by whom, for what. Here is what the evidence actually shows — and what it implies about the design of tools that genuinely want to help.


Where technology genuinely helps

Technology has been genuinely transformative for connection in specific contexts — especially for people who are geographically isolated or belong to small communities.

For people with rare conditions, niche interests, or minority identities in isolated communities, the internet has been transformative. Finding others who share your specific experience, connecting with communities that would have been inaccessible pre-internet, maintaining relationships across geography — these are real and significant contributions to human connection.

Video calling has preserved and deepened relationships across distance. Specific online communities have provided genuine belonging to people who lacked it locally. Technology, used deliberately and for the right purposes, can genuinely connect.


Where it systematically fails

Social media, as currently designed, does not optimise for connection. It optimises for engagement time, which is different.

The research on social media and loneliness consistently shows that passive consumption increases loneliness. Broadcast-mode posting does not consistently reduce it. Active, reciprocal, genuinely personal interaction — direct messages, video calls, real-time conversation — has better outcomes. But this is not what the platforms make easy or rewarding.

The design of most social platforms creates the sensation of social activity while often delivering less genuine connection than a single phone call.


Technology designed for genuine connection

The design question is: what does this technology actually optimise for?

Mindfuse is designed to provide one thing: a real voice conversation with a real person. No feed, no algorithm, no engagement optimisation. Just the most direct possible path to genuine human contact. One tap, one person, one conversation.

First conversation free. €4 a month. iOS and Android.

Related reading
Digital LonelinessParadox of Social MediaScreen Time and Mental HealthOnline Relationships RealLoneliness by ageHow to overcome loneliness

Technology that actually connects. One tap.

Mindfuse: anonymous voice calls with real people. No judgment, no history, no agenda.

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