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Could You Be Addicted to the Internet?

Billosaur writes "Over at The Register, Dr Stephen Juan has this interesting article on Internet Addiction Disorder (IAD). Apparently this has been around since at least 1995 and there are those lobbying for it to be included in the DSM-IV. While some people use the Internet a lot for work or to keep in touch with family & friends as well as banking and bill-paying, it's interesting to thing that some people actually become addicted. There's still a lot of controversy over the diagnosis, whether this is true addiction or not. There is more detailed information available in this paper from Viriginia Tech."

8 of 261 comments (clear)

  1. is the title a rhetorical question? by ChristTrekker · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The answer is so obviously "yes" in this audience. Was there any doubt? Why even ask?

  2. I know I am by Terminal+Saint · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm also addicted to my car. Darned if a day goes by that I don't use it to get somewhere too far to walk.

    Just because you use something often doesn't mean it's an addiction.

    --
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    1. Re:I know I am by TubeSteak · · Score: 5, Insightful
      I'm also addicted to my car. Darned if a day goes by that I don't use it to get somewhere too far to walk.

      Just because you use something often doesn't mean it's an addiction.
      If not driving causes you anxiety, then you're addicted.

      Ditto for e-mail, browsing fark, /. or whatever other 'thing' on the internet that you just can't live without.

      And you actually can get addicted to something like walking, running, biking or driving. Just because you aren't does not mean that others haven't been addicted.
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  3. Symptoms list is s/alcohol/internet by RobertB-DC · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Really, it's pretty pitiful. It looks like all the "research" entailed was to substitute the word "internet" for "alcohol". Here are just a few of their "symptoms":
    * Internet engagement used as a way of escaping problems or relieving feelings of guilt, helplessness, anxiety, or depression.
    * Concealing from or lying to family members about the extent of internet use.
    * Internet user driven to financial difficulty due to incurring unaffordable internet fees.

    Isn't that last one just teh stupid? It's cribbed word-for-word from a typical symptom of alcholism, as are the rest.

    Even if there are still ISPs in the world that charge by the MB, it just doesn't fly. Now, if they were talking about "unexpected" credit card charges, maybe... but pr0n addiction .NE. internet "addiction".
    --
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  4. Can't ANYTHING be addictive? by starseeker · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm not a medical person so perhaps there is some criteria I'm not familiar with, but isn't addictive behavior pretty much the same regardless of what someone is addicted to? Is the question whether the "addiction" is chemically based vs. simply being socially based? (For example, if a nerd likes playing Quake for 16 hours a day instead of interacting normally with the human race, does that constitute addiction or just different mental software?)

    I mean really, if addiction is defined as depending on the chemicals that are generated when we feel "good" wouldn't an excess of ANYTHING that makes us feel "good" be a candidate for a cause? And wouldn't it be expected that potential causes of addiction depend on the individual? Some are obvious and would impact virtually anyone (chemical manipulation) but other behaviors which don't directly alter mood via chemical means I would intuitively expect to be more subtle.

    Heh, maybe anti-social people (not the angry, dangerous wackos but those who are just indifferent to and/or dislike social situations) would argue that the rest of us are addicted to social interaction. ;-) The rest of us would probably take issue with that, but really what objective criteria would be used to have the argument?

    Anybody with a medical degree around here that can point to some definitive definition of the word "addiction" and what it means, medically?

    --
    "I object to doing things that computers can do." -- Olin Shivers, lispers.org
  5. Like my friends who take drugs say. by Buzz_Litebeer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I can stop if I want to.

    I just dont want to, and you arent going to convince me to stop. :-)

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  6. Re:Internet? by anagama · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Tubes? What about the boob-tube? I spend a lot of time on the internet. By the same token, I spend almost no time watching television -- I see DVDs from time to time -- no cable, no antenna, just a DVD player connected to the TV, and yeah, call me an elitist I don't care. Anyway, why does the internet get bashed for being addicting, but television doesn't? Some people watch 5 or 6 hours of TV each day and yet I rarely see articles about how addictive TV is. "Internet Addiction" is just another way to bash the net as an evil place by those who either don't understand its utility, or don't want people to understand its utility.

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  7. Re:Internet? by geekoid · · Score: 4, Insightful

    television does get bashed for being addictive, but this report is about the internet, not TV.

    ""Internet Addiction" is just another way to bash the net as an evil place by those who either don't understand its utility, or don't want people to understand its utility"

    no, internet addiction is when people turn to the internet even to the point where it is harmfull to them financially or socially.

    Why would you think the internet would be an exception to everything else when it comes to addictions?

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