| ▲ | twoodfin 2 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
This is begging the question. Doritos are designed to taste good and encourage you to eat them to your satisfaction. The latest Mario game is designed to be playable & fun for as long as you have time and energy to play it. My Instagram feed is designed to engage me with interesting and relevant content for as long as I have time to scroll. All three can be used in unhealthy ways, and would be less likely to be so used if they were designed less well to their goals. Which is “designed to be addictive”? | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | fc417fc802 2 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
No, it is not begging the question. Can you point to where I presupposed my own conclusions? You are (I suspect disingenuously) pretending not to understand intent. It doesn't matter if the outcome is the same here what matters is the intent behind the design when considered in the context of the intended usecase. That's in addition to lots of other factors (some of which I listed) plus any relevant legislation plus any relevant case law and that will all be examined in great detail by a court. At the end of the day what is legal and what is not is decided by that process. A large part of the point of employing corporate lawyers is to prevent a situation where your past behavior is examined from arising in the first place. I'd suggest the essay "what color are your bits" if you're genuinely struggling to understand this concept. | |||||||||||||||||
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