Metaverse is a risk to human social skills, Abba Voyage producer tells MPs

22 November 2022, 13:24

The Abba Voyage virtual concert
Abba Voyage. Picture: PA

Svana Gisla told the DCMS Committee technology does not always have to push for more screen time.

The metaverse is a concern because it will encourage more screen time and damage human connections, the producer of the Abba Voyage show told MPs.

Svana Gisla told the Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee the technology “scares” her and does not represent an obvious improvement on digital experiences.

She told MPs Abba Voyage, a physical concert featuring four 3D digital versions of the group’s younger selves singing and dancing to some of their hits, was purposely designed to be a large group experience rather than a fully virtual or digital streaming event on mobile devices or headsets.

The concert takes place in a purpose-built 3,000 seater arena in east London.

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg has branded the metaverse – a virtual world accessed via virtual reality headsets where users can access all their essential services as well as work and socialise with others around the world – the future of the internet.

But Ms Gisla said group experiences are more natural for humans as “we are pack animals” and, because of the rise of technology and mobile devices, “it’s only very recently that we’ve been encouraged not to be”.

“The metaverse scares me in that way because I feel like just because the technology is available doesn’t mean we have to use it,” she said.

“It doesn’t mean it’s good for us, it doesn’t mean it’s improving anything, and I don’t see any improvement in putting (in) more screens and getting our younger generations to dive deeper into the loneliness of being inside a screen all day. That’s just my personal take on it.”

“We made the choice not to go digital with this show. We had lots and lots of people telling us we were mad to be spending all this money and creating the show for people to have to travel to a location 3,000 at a time to experience it,” Ms Gisla said.

“They didn’t understand why we weren’t showing millions of people around the world. But the answer to that, for us, was very simple – we wanted an emotional experience.

“We like human emotion and we worry and I worry that, with technology, it’s made us very insular. It’s a very lonely existence to live with technology. It’s actually made to separate people and connect them one-to-one with a device.

“We see it in our children, we see it in our grandchildren – their social skills are not there and the interactive, emotional experience of being with people and experiencing things is getting lost.”

Ms Gisla said photography and filming are banned at Abba Voyage because the show wants its audience to be “present” and to remind them “you can experience things without putting your phone in front of your eyes”.

“Things do happen if you don’t post them on Instagram. They still happened,” she said.

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

Morning drone (002)

Drone project reaches ‘important milestone’ with final trial flights

Prime Minister hosts Chanukah reception

AI tech giants should not be subsidised by British creatives, Starmer signals

Dr Craig Wright arrives at the Rolls Building in London for the trial earlier this year (Lucy North/PA)

Computer scientist behind false Bitcoin founder claim sentenced for contempt

Google has been contacted for comment (PA)

ICO criticises Google over ‘irresponsible’ advertising tracking change

Some 22% of consumers have increased their use of second-hand shopping apps in the past three months (Depop/PA)

Millions of Britons earning average £146 a month on second-hand platforms

ChatGPT being used via WhatsApp

ChatGPT joins WhatsApp to allow anyone to access the AI chatbot

A Facebook home page on a laptop screen

Meta fined more than 250 million euro by Irish data commission following breach

Finger poised above WhatsApp app on smartphone

Ending use of WhatsApp is ‘clear admission’ Government was wrong, claim Tories

Phone with WhatsApp on the screen

Scottish Government to cease use of WhatsApp by spring, says Forbes

Open AI

OpenAI rolls out ChatGPT search engine tool to all users

Most people happy to share health data to develop artificial intelligence

Government launches consultation on copyrighted material being used to train AI

Debbie Weinstein

Google names UK executive as president for Europe, Middle East and Africa

The Apple App store app on an iPad (PA)

Shopping and Roblox named among most popular Apple App Store downloads of 2024

A young child lies on a couch while playing on a smartphone

Q&A: Ofcom, the Online Safety Act, and codes of practice for social media

A girl using a mobile phone

Ofcom’s new online harms rules for social media firms disappoint campaigners

A man in a hoodie in front of several computer monitors

Peers urge ministers to step-up efforts to criminalise deepfake abuse