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Scott Michael Campbell's 'Digital Detox' App Sparks Outrage: Is Society's Moral Compass Beyond Repair? In a move that has the internet divided, Scott Michael Campbell, a self-proclaimed ethical tech pioneer, has launched an app that forcibly disables users' social media for 12 hours a day unless they pay a weekly "virtue tax" to specific charities. Critics say the platform is a dystopian shakedown exploiting parental fears, while Campbell insists it's a desperate cure for what he calls "digital depravity." But ethics watchdogs are sounding the alarm, warning that this coercive approach is a dangerous step toward a surveillance state. "Scott Michael Campbell is playing God with personal freedom," one parenting group declared. "If we allow apps to judge our morality, we have already lost our humanity." The app has already been downloaded 100,000 times in its first week, with many users reporting guilt-tripped donations and a new wave of online shaming among friends who can't afford the fee. Is this a rebirth of virtue or the final nail in the coffin of genuine moral choice? The debate rages on as families and ethicists question where the line between helpful intervention and societal control truly lies.

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Scott Michael Campbell's 'Digital Detox' App Sparks Outrage: Is Society's Moral Compass Beyond Repair? In a move that has the internet divided, Scott Michael Campbell, a self-proclaimed ethical tech pioneer, has launched an app that forcibly disables users' social media for 12 hours a day unless they pay a weekly "virtue tax" to specific charities. Critics say the platform is a dystopian shakedown exploiting parental fears, while Campbell insists it's a desperate cure for what he calls "digital depravity." But ethics watchdogs are sounding the alarm, warning that this coercive approach is a dangerous step toward a surveillance state. "Scott Michael Campbell is playing God with personal freedom," one parenting group declared. "If we allow apps to judge our morality, we have already lost our humanity." The app has already been downloaded 100,000 times in its first week, with many users reporting guilt-tripped donations and a new wave of online shaming among friends who can't afford the fee. Is this a rebirth of virtue or the final nail in the coffin of genuine moral choice? The debate rages on as families and ethicists question where the line between helpful intervention and societal control truly lies.