You didn't choose
to live digitally.
It chose you.
Nobody asked you.
Nobody sat you down and said: here's what's going to happen. Your phone will know where you sleep. Your refrigerator will have a terms of service agreement. Your dead relatives will have Facebook profiles. Advertisers will know you're pregnant before your mother does. And you will pay a monthly fee to access your own music.
Nobody asked. It just happened.
And somewhere between getting your first email address and watching an algorithm recommend a product you only thought about buying — you became a digital citizen. Not by choice. By default.
Not technology bashing. Not nostalgia for a simpler time. This isn't a publication written by someone who wants to go back to fax machines and paper maps. Those days are gone and good riddance to most of them.
This is something harder than that.
This is about looking clearly at what digitization has actually done to us — the good, the genuinely useful, the occasionally brilliant — alongside the things nobody puts in the press release. The attention theft. The manufactured dependency. The quiet erosion of things we didn't know we valued until they were gone.
Privacy. Solitude. The ability to be unreachable. The experience of being lost and finding your way. The memory you never had to form because your phone remembers everything for you.
Digitized Society is where we do the math.
Every week: honest audits of the tools and platforms that run your life. Critical takes on where technology is taking us without asking. Practical guides for navigating the digital world with your eyes open. And occasionally, the kind of uncomfortable question nobody in Silicon Valley wants you to ask.
We're not anti-technology.
We're anti-sleepwalking.
Welcome to Digitized Society. You didn't choose to be here — but now that you are, you might as well be informed.
Costa Rica — 2026