DIGITALOSOPHY: EDITORIAL ANGLES

Six story angles for articles, features, and interviews.


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1. Digital Life Needs Better Words
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Digital life keeps creating situations that ordinary language does not name well. The book develops several terms that give editors and readers a more precise vocabulary: Digital Sleepwalkers, Social Zombing, Back to Home Strategy. From the author's wider work, this vocabulary also extends to Synthetic Domestic Abuse, a concept introduced in 2026 around domestic robots, family life, and learned patterns of abuse.


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2. The Myth of the Digital Native
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Many people know how to use technology, but far fewer understand what technology is doing to their attention, habits, reputation, and relationships. Digital fluency is not the same as digital awareness. A teenager fluent on TikTok is not necessarily fluent in TikTok.


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3. Online Reputation Is Not What You Post
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Reputation is now shaped inside platforms people do not control. Social Zombing, a term co-created by Gabriele Gobbo and Max Guadagnoli, describes coordinated digital attacks that exploit platform systems to damage personal reputation without the target ever knowing why their account was penalized.


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4. Children, Screens, and Adult Responsibility
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Children do not need adults who merely keep up with the latest apps. They need adults who understand the digital environment well enough to guide them through it. The real question is not how much time children spend online, but what kind of adults are present when they do.


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5. The Italian Perspective on Digital Culture
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Digitalosophy brings a perspective shaped outside Silicon Valley: technology observed from Italy, where digital systems have always had to negotiate with culture, family, rhythm, and everyday human life. Thirty years of watching the digital age from a distance produces a different set of questions.


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6. Technology Should Serve Human Judgment
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The central question Digitalosophy asks is not how to use more tools, but how to remain aware while using the ones that already shape daily life. Technology should serve human judgment, not replace it.


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PRESS CONTACT
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digitalosophy@macpremium.it
https://www.digitalosophy.com/press/
