Month: September 2025
Lauren Edmonds/Business Insider
- I joined dozens of others for a rally in New York to learn what the Luddite movement was all about.
- Attendees gave anti-tech speeches, smashed Apple products, and advocated for real-world connections.
- “We have given ourselves the power to amuse ourselves to death,” one rallygoer told me.
You won’t find much about the modern Luddite movement online.
By design, those embracing it are ditching smartphones and deleting their social media accounts. My editors, however, spotted a Subtack post that mentioned a coming rally and dispatched me to learn more about this offline movement the only way you should: IRL.
And so I found myself on a sunny early fall Saturday on the High Line, an elevated public park in Manhattan that is often crowded with tourists posing for selfies, at an anti-tech event called the Scathing Hatred of Information Technology and the Passionate Hemorrhaging of Our Neo-liberal Experience rally.
That’s “S.H.I.T.P.H.O.N.E” for short. Several dozen people were there. One attendee told me they heard about it through word of mouth, which makes sense.
“Even if it gives us rabies, we will free the iPad babies!” the crowd of mostly young people chanted.
Lauren Edmonds/Business Insider
They donned colored folders fashioned into pointy hats inspired by gnomes, a symbol for the rally due to the mythical creatures’ earthy, non-digital aesthetic. Each hat contained a printed note taped inside criticizing things like AI data centers and inviting people to join “the Luddite Renaissance.”
“5 hours of daily screen time = 15 years of life by the age 70,” the note read. “Loneliness epidemic? It’s not your fault. A society built around a phone is obscene.”
Some brought signs, including one that read “Don’t ignore the gnome revolution.” One person arrived dressed as an iPad baby, complete with a fake phone screen featuring apps like Tinder, Subway Surfers, DraftKings, and Cocomelon.
Lauren Edmonds/Business Insider
For many in the movement, the goal is to take a conscious step back from the social media apps and all-in-one smartphones that have become an increasingly overwhelming part of people’s daily lives. Ultimately, they are advocating for healthier relationships with technology.
A 2023 Gallup survey found that 51% of surveyed adolescents spent at least 4.8 hours daily on social media. Tech companies like TikTok have faced lawsuits accusing them of creating addictive algorithms that harm children’s mental and physical health.
“This kind of weariness around technology has been around for a while,” Gabriela Nguyen, the founder of Appstinence, told Business Insider.
Appstinence is a student organization that Nguyen, 24, founded while a graduate student at Harvard University. The Gen-Z-led organization is focused on giving practical advice to people looking to wean themselves off their personal social media accounts.
Appstinence is just one of a seemingly growing constellation of groups, mostly led by young people, advocating for reduced reliance on technology, either for one’s own mental health or as a protest against powerful tech companies that have an ever-growing hold on all aspects of our lives.
Lauren Edmonds/Business Insider
As I listened to the speeches, it was impossible not to consider my own relationship with technology. As an under-30 millennial, I remember when peak technology was beepers and Walkmans. However, by the 2000s, my reliance on technology shifted rapidly with the introduction of Myspace and the iPhone. Now, my cellphone sometimes feels permanently attached to my hand.
Like many folks, it’s become second nature for me to have a flood of news notifications 24 hours a day and social media apps that never sleep. I’ve tried to be mindful about how often I rely on my devices, but after over two decades absorbing long and short-form content from tiny screens, it’s hard.
Nguyen, who grew up in Silicon Valley and got her first smart device at nine years old, doesn’t have any social media accounts at the moment. She primarily uses a Light Phone II, a “dumb” phone without social media apps, news notifications, or an email function.
“I think increasingly more and more people are having to question, even if I do need to use a phone for certain things, is the trade-off that I’m making of my time and attention worth it?” Nguyen said.
Eliana Steele, who attended Saturday’s rally, said she grew up with few internet restrictions and had access to an iPad at a young age.
“I feel like I’ve spent so much of my early life glued to a screen. I find it particularly addicting and incredibly dangerous,” Steele told Business Insider. “I think we need to be worried about the repercussions this will have on both individuals and society.”
Lauren Edmonds/Business Insider
Another attendee, Noah Edelman, said technology is an addiction that isolates us.
“I really believe that the way for us to come back together to have — not just better lives — but better politics, better ways of having community, better ways of being together as a world all comes from having a healthy relationship with technology,” he said.
Edelman added that although information technology has accomplished “awe-inspiring” things, “power is not always good.”
“We have given ourselves the power to amuse ourselves to death,” Edelman said. “We cannot let ourselves be so tied up in our own small amusements that we forget the bigger things in life.”
About 30 minutes after the rally kicked off, attendees formed a parade and marched from the High Line to the first of two stops: a Tesla store.
Targeting Tesla
Lauren Edmonds/Business Insider
Rallygoers, accompanied by a live makeshift marching band, walked about two blocks to a Tesla store in New York City’s Meatpacking District.
Once there, a rally organizer stood atop a literal soapbox and encouraged attendees to write messages about Tesla CEO Elon Musk on the sidewalk surrounding the store.
Lauren Edmonds/Business Insider
“We are going to chalk everything we think about these cars, these robots, this AI, these data centers,” he said.
In addition to electric vehicles, Musk is developing robots under Tesla and rockets under SpaceX. He also purchased Twitter in 2022 and renamed it X before launching an AI company, xAI, the following year. Musk also set up a data center for xAI in Atlanta. His wealth, dominance in the tech industry, and forays into politics have made Musk, and by extension Tesla, a lightning rod for protesters.
Lauren Edmonds/Business Insider
Some chalked messages criticized Musk directly, while others referenced his products or the technology he promotes. The group stayed for about 10 minutes before traveling to its final stop: the Apple store.
Apple is a food
On the way to the Apple store, rallygoers chanted, “TikTok, Reels, YouTube Shorts. Show us your weekly reports.”
They also chanted, “Apples are for eating.”
At this point, the rally took on a performative atmosphere as participants staged a pseudo-trial examining Apple and its products. Apple, which owns data centers and incorporates AI into its products, recently unveiled the new iPhone 17 earlier this month.
Lauren Edmonds/Business Insider
Many of the speeches during the mock trial and by other attendees throughout the rally emphasized the importance of creating an in-real-life community and being present.
“For every second you have your headphones in on the train, you’re not talking to anybody and you’re not taking in the world. For every one of those seconds, how much of your life do you let pass by?” one man asked.
After attendees found the products “guilty,” one person, dubbed “the executioner,” used a rock to smash the tech products into pieces.
Lauren Edmonds/Business Insider
Nguyen, who did not attend Saturday’s rally and doesn’t support smashing tech products, said that stepping back from social media can not only improve one’s mental health but also give one a better perspective of the world.
“If you’re spending too much time online, it’s shaping how you see your position in the world,” Nguyen said.
Lauren Edmonds/Business Insider
Nguyen added that she felt a responsibility to address the effects of modern technology on young people.
“We’re going to be inheriting the world. At some point, we’ll be political leaders, CEOs of companies, workers, so we have to somehow answer these questions about how much technology should be integrated,” Nguyen said.
She added: “Departing from the digital world and actually embracing the real world is Gen Z’s coming of age.”
Reiji Kobayashi
- Reiji Kobayashi expanded his startup to India, targeting its large, growing market size.
- Kobayashi’s startup, Hakki, focuses on car microfinancing in developing countries.
- He said that India is a friendlier market for startups because people are quick to adopt new brands.
This as-told-to essay is based on conversations with Reiji Kobayashi, a Japanese startup founder based in Bengaluru, India. The essay has been edited for length and clarity.
I’ve always been an entrepreneur. I dropped out of university before my final year to launch a web marketing business in Japan. I sold the company, started learning about the real estate business, and launched a share house company. After leaving that company, I moved to Kenya in 2018, where I had traveled in college, to launch a startup.
My first year in Kenya was a nightmare. I had built and sold several businesses at that point, but still struggled to raise money from external investors for a new startup. After a while, I decided to put in my own money and launch a startup called Hakki. I built a microfinancing platform for people who wanted to buy cars because Kenya seemed to have a lack of credit options.
After working on Hakki for six years, where we financed over 3,500 cars, growth in Kenya seemed limited. Africa has about 1.4 billion people, but they are scattered. Kenya only has about 50 million people. India, with its 1.3 billion people and rapidly growing economy, felt like the next best target market for us.
Life in Bengaluru
I moved to Bengaluru in 2024 to expand the company in India. We now have four employees based in India, 74 in Kenya, and two in South Africa, where we also have a presence. Our headquarters is in Japan, where most of our fundraising has happened, and we aim to go public in the Japanese market in 2028.
There are a lot of things I like about living in Bengaluru. For one, I like to wear casual T-shirts instead of suits, and Bengaluru’s weather is stable and comfortable.
The people are kind, have lots of energy, and are positive about the future, which I really like. That’s not the case in Japan, where, because of the aging population, people are worried about the economy and the future of the country.
I have a group I play football with every evening after work. I’ve also made some friends I watch cricket matches with, accompanied by alcohol and chicken, which was surprising to me because I always thought most Indians are vegetarian.
There are challenges too. I don’t like the spicy food and haven’t gotten used to it, so I spend most of my time eating noodles I bring over from Japan.
Founder-friendly market
The way business is done in India is very different from Japan, too. Indians have the attitude to try or take up something challenging without needing accurate projections of what will happen. Japanese businesses spend a lot of time in meetings and making sure everything is done with the consensus of the majority of the people. Investment decisions move much faster in India than in Japan.
India also feels like a much friendlier market for startups because people are open to trying new products and don’t get suspicious of new companies that may be offering a cheaper solution than existing brands.
The people are hardworking. We’ve hired four Indian employees, and I’m surprised to say that they work more than me. They come into the office at 9 a.m. and easily work until 9 p.m. Even our company driver is up early in the morning and available with the car until midnight, which I was not expecting.
I may have to move out of India in a few months to expand the company in other countries like Thailand. But I’m commited to growing the startup here and having a big presence in India. I plan to travel back and forth and can see myself moving back to India again.
Are you a foreign founder or VC who moved to India in the last few years? Please reach out at sgoel@businessinsider.com.
Bloomberg/Bloomberg via Getty Images
- Many US industries, like tech and finance, have long recruited top talent from around the world.
- Trump’s policies in his 2nd term, however, have made hiring foreign workers more difficult.
- Other countries are seeing an opportunity.
The world’s top talent has long gravitated toward Silicon Valley and Wall Street.
That might now be changing, however, as governments around the world scramble to attract the high-skilled foreign workers left in the lurch by President Donald Trump’s recent policy changes.
In his second term, Trump has used executive authority to push companies to hire more US citizens, casting it as part of his “Make America Great Again” agenda.
In his latest order, the president announced a new $100,000 fee for H-1B visas, which tech and finance companies have long relied on to hire the best and brightest from abroad.
His crackdown on immigration more broadly has also given some foreign workers pause when considering the US for a job. And federal cuts to research funding have led some top scientists to think twice about working in the US.
As companies reconsider who they hire, and workers reconsider where they want to work, other governments — some of which are competing with the US in the race to develop artificial intelligence — have begun making moves to attract the top talent for themselves.
RCA
- Jony Ive has unveiled a $4,800 luxury lantern for all you yacht enthusiasts.
- The Sailing Lantern is a limited-edition, durable light.
- Ive, known for designing Apple’s iconic products, emphasizes utility and art in design.
Apple’s famed designer, now working with OpenAI, has unveiled a must-have for the yacht set.
Ive’s design collective, LoveFrom, partnered with Japanese manufacturer Balmuda to create the Sailing Lantern — a $4,800 limited-edition yachting light built to withstand the harshest maritime conditions.
The lantern is made from stainless steel and glass and includes LEDs with rechargeable batteries.
“I would have just bought a lantern for my yacht — I wanted to. But there isn’t anything on the market. So instead, I spent two years hard at work designing it,” Ive told Boat International.
With only 1,000 units available, the lantern is as much a collector’s item as it is a personal passion project rooted in Ive’s lifelong love of sailing, according to Boat International.
The UK-born Ive joined Apple in 1992 and quickly rose through the ranks. While there, he helped design some of Apple’s biggest products, including the iPod, the iPhone, and the iPad. He left in 2019.
Ive then launched his own independent design company, called LoveFrom, with fellow designer, Marc Newson. Last year, Ive launched io, an AI hardware design firm. OpenAI acquired io earlier this year, which means Ive now works for another iconic tech company.
Ive is known for his unique design philosophy, which focuses on utility as much as art.
“We’re surrounded by anonymous, poorly made objects. It’s tempting to think it’s because the people who use them don’t care — just like the people who make them. But what we’ve shown is that people do care,” he once told Time. “It’s not just about aesthetics. They care about things that are thoughtfully conceived and well-made. We make and sell a very, very large number of (hopefully) beautiful, well-made things. Our success is a victory for purity, integrity — for giving a damn.”
Ive’s partnership with OpenAI confirmed that the leading AI startup is developing devices, but neither Ive nor OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has disclosed what those might be. Probably not an AI-powered yacht, but time will tell.
