Session 1 β€” The Hook
#9 Β· Infinite Scroll

πŸ“œ Why Your Brain Loves Infinite Scroll

Have you ever noticed that you can scroll a feed forever, yet never hit the bottom? That's not a happy accident β€” it's a deliberate design choice called infinite scroll, invented in 2006 by a developer named Aza Raskin. Years later, he admitted it was like handing people "an endless bag of chips."

Why it works:
β€’ No stopping cues: In the real world, you finish a chapter, the credits roll, the bag is empty β€” your brain gets a natural break. Infinite scroll removes those cues.
β€’ Seamless dopamine drip: The content just keeps coming, keeping your brain in a low-level state of anticipation.
β€’ Efficiency for them, exhaustion for you: The longer you scroll, the more ads and recommendations the platform can show.

The cost?
β€’ Attention spans shrink.
β€’ Kids lose hours that should be spent sleeping, studying, or simply being bored (a critical ingredient for creativity).
β€’ Your sense of time itself gets warped.

Infinite scroll was meant to "help." In reality, it hijacks one of your most limited resources: attention.

Knowledge is the first step. Protection is the second.

WhiteCat is the router that quietly enforces the boundaries you set β€” no arguments, no workarounds.

See Plans β†’