> where they'll use their friends' devices to do it.
That'd already be much, much better than using it at every possible moment.
Why do people just give up proactively? Yes, you can't prevent it 100%, but you can still try to restrict it as much as possible.
> Why do people just give up proactively?
Because we're up against trillion dollar companies that employ armies of experts with the goal of inducing addictive behavior. We're deeply outgunned.
Because kids have a genuine need for socialization, and being the one without a phone means you just don't get invited to shit. Birthday parties, hangouts, random trips to the ice cream shop.
Because kids are smart. I'm very technical - I had a pfSense firewall, Pihole, and Apple's screen time on my kids' devices. They found ways around that within hours; kids at school swap VPN/proxy instructions and whatnot.
Because kids these days get a school laptop, on which I have zero admin rights.
Because I don't want to be a jail warden, I want to be a parent.
Yes, I understand all of that. What I meant was: refusing smartphones as long as possible. For example, as long as only ~50% of your kid's friends have a smartphone, it should be possible to still resist. Just don't be one of those parents who (unknowingly) help create the problem in the first place by succumbing to Big Tech on the first occasion.