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Digital Overload Harms the Human Brain: 71% of People Struggle to Stay Focused
Digital Overload Harms the Human Brain: 71% of People Struggle to Stay Focused

Miami Herald

time11-06-2025

  • Miami Herald

Digital Overload Harms the Human Brain: 71% of People Struggle to Stay Focused

65% of people feel overwhelmed by the amount of information available online. Meanwhile, almost 50% feel stressed about missing important people often start working on one online task, they find themselves getting distracted by other links, tabs, or notifications - with many people (71%) later realizing they drifted away from their original the end of the day, 64% of people feel that they didn't manage to do something important and are looking for ways to simplify their interaction with information. LIMASSOL, CY / ACCESS Newswire / June 11, 2025 / Today, privacy-first Aloha Browser announces the results of its global study, which showed that people suffer from information overload: almost 30% of them keeping open over 10 tabs, and half of them feel stressed when they miss out on something important. About 60% of the respondents receive notifications for things they don't care about more than once per hour, including 30% receiving them every 15 minutes or more often. This situation is negatively influencing human productivity and quality of life, with 71% of people confirming that they started working on one online task, only to get distracted by other links, tabs, or notifications, and later realized they drifted away from their original goal, and 64%-that, at the end of the day, they feel that they didn't manage to do something important, such as spend time with family and friends, or sport and hobbies. "At Aloha, we believe that technologies are meant to help people cope with digital overload, stay focused, decrease stress, and organize smart information consumption. In response to our users' requests (with 58% of respondents being interested in using an AI tool that helps them stay updated and have at their fingertips the information that matters to them), today, we are releasing Snips for iOS, which follows the Snips for desktops launch earlier this year. It is designed to keep people on top of the information they really want or need and avoid digital noise," said Andrew Frost Moroz, the Founder of Aloha Browser. "Snips paves the way for a new human-centric browsing experience, shifting the paradigm from digital resources showing users content that algorithms think they need to a model that empowers users to act as their own algorithms." About Snips Snips is a ground-breaking web-snipping tool for desktops and mobile iOS devices that allows people to escape digital noise and focus on what matters to them, minimizing distractions, supporting mental clarity, and simplifying daily routines. These unique, intelligent live screenshots proactively monitor web updates for the exact information chosen by the person, offering a convenient, instantly updated feed in a familiar vertical format. This enables people to curate their own algorithms and be engaged with only the content that matters to them, protecting them from compulsive information intake, eliminating unnecessary browsing friction, helping them stay focused and avoid stress. Already available on desktops and launching today for iOS users worldwide, the Android release is expected in the coming weeks. Video, images and other materials are available here. About Aloha Browser Since 2015, Cyprus-based Aloha Browser has set out to make digital freedom and digital privacy accessible to everyone. Through its privacy-first web browser and Private AI Assistant, Aloha offers a seamless and intuitive user experience while providing unparalleled data protection, security and easy access to online content anytime, anywhere. The company has adhered to the principle of safeguarding user data. It refrains from any collection, storage, or monetization of user data and derives its revenue from its premium services. Aloha verifies the safety of its open-source engine daily, creates and designs all other browser elements and features in-house. Aloha's core product is its private and secure web browser, which includes a free encrypted and unlimited VPN with no logs, built-in AdBlock, enhanced privacy features like biometrics-locked tabs, a powerful file manager, and a media player with native VR video support. Aloha Browser is currently available for Windows, macOS, iOS, iPad and Android platforms, with millions of users worldwide. Discover more at Media Contacts: MediaRelations@ SOURCE: Aloha Browser press release

Smash Through Informational Noise: Meet Aloha Browser's Cutting-Edge Snips Tool for iOS
Smash Through Informational Noise: Meet Aloha Browser's Cutting-Edge Snips Tool for iOS

Miami Herald

time11-06-2025

  • Miami Herald

Smash Through Informational Noise: Meet Aloha Browser's Cutting-Edge Snips Tool for iOS

Snips for iOS - a new browser snipping tool for mobile devices - helps users break free from web clutter, protecting their time and mental selecting information from web pages they want to follow, users will see a feed of smartphone-sized snips in a familiar vertical format, with the content that matters to them. The latest updates appear at the top of their feed, and users can swipe through all their snips just like in social shifts the paradigm of information consumption that results in increasing users' focus, concentration, and productivity and decreasing the stress from the informational chaos. According to Aloha's study, over 70% of the respondents start performing one online task only to get distracted by other links, tabs, or notifications - and later realize they've drifted away from their original goal. LIMASSOL, CY / ACCESS Newswire / June 11, 2025 / Today, privacy-first Aloha Browser released Snips for iOS - a ground-breaking web-snipping tool that allows users to escape digital noise and focus on what matters to them, minimizing distractions, supporting mental clarity, and simplifying daily routines. These unique, intelligent live screenshots proactively monitor web updates for the exact information chosen by users, offering a convenient, instantly updated feed in a familiar vertical format. This enables people to curate their own algorithms and be engaged with only the content important to them, protecting them from compulsive information intake, eliminating unnecessary browsing friction, helping them stay focused and avoid stress. Launching today for iOS users worldwide, the Android release is expected in the coming weeks. According to Aloha's global study, people suffer from information overload, and because of it, most of them are not able to stay focused[1]. 65% confirmed that they feel overwhelmed by the amount of information available online, while 71% admitted that they start performing one online task only to get distracted by other links, tabs, or notifications - later realizing they've drifted away from their original goal. This results in most of them (64%) feeling that they didn't manage to do something important at the end of the day. "At Aloha, we understand the frustration of information overload that users suffer in modern days, and know that most of them feel stressed about missing important information - almost 50% of our users confirmed it," said Andrew Frost Moroz, the Founder of Aloha Browser. "Snips for iOS, which follows the Snips for desktops launch earlier this year, is designed to keep people on top of the information they really want or need. According to our study, almost 60% of respondents receive notifications for things they don't care about more than once per hour- including 30% who get them every 15 minutes or more often. While updating the only information based on the person's request, Snips protects people from noise and gives them the opportunity for smart information consumption, paving the way for a human-centric browsing experience." SIMPLE AND EASY TO USE The Snips for iOS feature is intuitive and easy to use: Choose the information you're interested in on a web page using the Aloha browser. Select "Create Snip" in the menu. Adjust the frame with your finger to capture the part of the webpage that contains the content you want to track for updates. Set up the notification. Access your Snips by swiping up on the Aloha's start page. Swipe easily through Snips with the same gesture you use in social media. Updates you care about will appear at the top of your feed. Smash through informational noise, while being updated on what is really important to you. PRIVATE AND SECURE Being a privacy-first browser, Aloha designed Snips to analyze web content using local processing power and on-device functionality, ensuring that information never unnecessarily leaves your device. Web pages are opened discreetly in the background, and only the specific section clipped by the user is monitored. Snips compares it to previously captured versions and brings any updates straight to the top of your feed. Video, images and other materials are available here. About Aloha Browser Since 2015, Cyprus-based Aloha Browser has set out to make digital freedom and digital privacy accessible to everyone. Through its privacy-first web browser and Private AI Assistant, Aloha offers a seamless and intuitive user experience while providing unparalleled data protection, security and easy access to online content anytime, anywhere. The company has adhered to the principle of safeguarding user data. It refrains from any collection, storage, or monetization of user data and derives its revenue from its premium services. Aloha verifies the safety of its open-source engine daily, creates and designs all other browser elements and features in-house. Aloha's core product is its private and secure web browser, which includes a free encrypted and unlimited VPN with no logs, built-in AdBlock, enhanced privacy features like biometrics-locked tabs, a powerful file manager, and a media player with native VR video support. Aloha Browser is currently available for Windows, macOS, iOS, iPad and Android platforms, with millions of users worldwide. Discover more at Media Contacts: MediaRelations@ [1] Aloha's Browser Internal Research "Digital Information Consumption", Q2 2025: a sample of 1,000 respondents with worldwide (WW) coverage. SOURCE: Aloha Browser press release

I have trouble focusing, but this AI browser feature helps
I have trouble focusing, but this AI browser feature helps

Fast Company

time05-05-2025

  • Fast Company

I have trouble focusing, but this AI browser feature helps

My worst workday habit is that I'm a compulsive web page checker. Throughout the day, I'm constantly refreshing the same handful of sites for updates. I'll check the metrics on my newsletters, swing through a subreddit or two, and click through some tech news sites—and that's before even getting to email and social media. Every time I do this, it's hard to refocus. So I was pretty eager to try Aloha Browser's new 'Snips' feature, which uses AI to periodically monitor web pages and notify you when things change. I figured that by having AI check web pages on my behalf, I could avoid the urge to do so myself and be better at staying on task. It's helped at least a little, but both Aloha and I still have some work to do. How Snips works Snips is currently available in the desktop version of Aloha for Mac and Windows, appearing as a little box-and-scissors icon next to the address bar. Clicking the icon brings up a selector tool for highlighting the part of the page you want to keep track of. After selecting a snippet, you'll see a menu for setting up alerts. Choose how often Aloha should check for updates (the default is once per day, but you can go as frequently as every five minutes), then write a sentence describing what changes it should watch for. For instance, if you wanted to monitor the price on a product page, you could write something like 'notify me when the price falls below $300.' In my case, I've set up a handful of Snips to cut down on compulsive page checking: For the pages where I check on newsletter metrics, I've instructed Aloha to only notify me when certain parameters change. I like to check the New York Yankees subreddit, so I've asked Aloha to notify me when new posts are created. If I post on social media, I can create a temporary Snip that alerts me if the responses reach a certain threshold. I have alerts set up for when new stories appear on Techmeme, just to make sure I don't miss anything important. For email, I have Aloha alert me of replies to existing conversation threads. Behind the scenes, Aloha uses on-device AI to analyze page content, then takes routine snapshots of the page to see if things change. For the notification requests, it uses a mix of on-device AI processing and large language models from Grok and OpenAI, but Aloha says no browsing data leaves your device in most cases. (The browser does send some especially complex tasks to a remote server for processing, but requires permission first and deletes the data immediately after.) Once you've created some Snips, they'll appear as screenshots on Aloha's new tab page. You can tweak the notifications from here, but you can also shuffle and resize the screenshots into a kind of glanceable information dashboard. Why it makes sense But Aloha's Snips feature is a useful alternative because of how granular it can get. You can set up price alerts on any retail site without sharing your contact information, and you can limit social media notifications to specific types of responses or reactions. The alerts come through the Mac or Windows notification tray, so your email inbox and phone notifications stay uncluttered. Room for improvement That's not to say Aloha's Snips feature is perfect. It's subject to the same vagaries as other generative AI tools, which means things may not always work as expected. For instance, I've experienced some instances of false positive notifications when nothing changes, or repeat notifications for things I've been alerted to already. Aloha's page refresh capabilities also don't seem to work 100% of the time. One snippet I set up for the 'Newest' section on Techmeme refused to update, and Aloha showed error messages while trying to update standard Reddit pages. (As a work-around, I had to create a snippet on instead.) If the information you need requires extra clicking or scrolling after reloading the page, it's not going to work with Snips either. And even when things are working properly, I still have to provide the appropriate degree of willpower. I don't need Aloha to check Reddit every five minutes, but if I set the interval to be too infrequent, I'll likely get antsy and start checking it myself. That's entirely a me problem. Aloha is not my main browser, and it was not really on my radar until the Snips feature arrived. It's made by a small team based in Cyprus, and touts an emphasis on privacy, but I still prefer the power-user features in the likes of Vivaldi and Floorp. Even so, it's easy enough to keep running in the background to discourage my compulsive checking habit. I'm going to keep doing that to take a little of the weight off my mind.

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