Okay, let's get this straight from the jump: are we actually surprised when a tech company pulls some shady crap? Seriously? Because if you are, I got a bridge in Brooklyn to sell you.
These companies sell us the dream, right? The dream of seamless integration, of a connected world, of... well, of a future that's always just slightly out of reach. They dangle the shiny new gadget, the groundbreaking software, the AI that's totally not going to steal your job (lol), and we eat it up. Every. Single. Time.
And what happens when the reality doesn't quite match the hype? Crickets. Or worse, a carefully crafted PR statement that dances around the truth like a politician avoiding a direct question. "We're committed to transparency," they say, while simultaneously burying the bad news in the fine print. Give me a break.
I mean, look at the whole Metaverse thing. Remember that? All the promises of virtual worlds and digital real estate? Now it's just... kind of there. Like that weird uncle you only see at Thanksgiving who keeps trying to get you to invest in his crypto scheme. Where's the outrage? Where's the accountability? We're too busy chasing the next shiny object to care that the last one turned out to be a turd.

They call it "disruption," but let's be real: it's just creative destruction with a Silicon Valley veneer. They break things, they move fast, and they apologize later (maybe). And who pays the price? The workers they exploit, the communities they gentrify, the planet they pollute. But hey, at least the shareholders are happy, right?
And the worst part is, we let them get away with it. We click "I agree" without reading the terms and conditions. We hand over our data without a second thought. We buy the latest gadget even though the old one still works perfectly fine. We're complicit, people. We're enabling this behavior.
It's like we're all stuck in this toxic relationship with technology. We know it's bad for us, but we can't quit it. We're addicted to the dopamine hits, the instant gratification, the illusion of progress. And the tech companies, they know it too. They're like the abusive boyfriend who keeps promising to change, and we keep falling for it.
Then again, maybe I'm the crazy one here. Maybe I'm just a jaded old cynic who's lost touch with the magic of innovation. Nah, I don't think so. I think I'm just tired of being lied to.
Tech companies are not your friends. They are not your saviors. They are businesses, plain and simple. And like any business, they're going to do whatever it takes to make a profit, even if it means bending the truth, exploiting their workers, or destroying the planet. So, the next time a tech company tries to sell you a dream, remember to ask yourself: what's the catch? And don't be surprised when you find out it's a nightmare.
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