Well, everybody seems to be on the same page when it comes to defining and deconstructing social media and the people it captivates. The next thing is to analyse the nature of what some perceive as a problem. There are people whose actual existence is satisfying enough to keep them from being hooked on social media, and there are those who have "good things to say" about sites like FaceBook and Twitter and who are more inclined to consider their affinity for it as useful and fulfilling, rather than additive and harmful. Corporate media profits from giving such people what they want. Since fixing the "perceived problem", would involve telling people how to live their lives, this creates a dilemma. I'm done.