Creepy Contagion: How Fakebook Wired Black Minds like Skinner Rats—and Why Abibitumi Is the Antidote

by Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Kambon

What to do right now: Download Abibitumi Apps and use them daily: 


DID YOU KNOW? The Unseen Experiment on Black Feeds

Most Black folks have never heard that in January 2012 Facebook data scientists secretly ran a week-long emotional contagion study on 689,003 users, manipulating the content of their News Feeds to filter out either positive or negative posts and then tracking how users’ own status updates shifted in tone. Published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in 2014, the paper by Kramer, Guillory, and Hancock showed that when positive expressions were reduced, people wrote fewer positive and more negative posts—and vice versa—even though the per‐user effect was tiny (about one fewer emotional word per 1,000 words). All of this occurred without explicit opt-in: Facebook pointed to its Data Use Policy as blanket consent, bypassing any independent IRB review and leaving participants unaware they were subjects in a massive social-network Skinner box.

The experiment ignited a firestorm in mid-2014 when The New York Times exposed its ethical loopholes, noting users never consented to having their moods toyed with, while the BBC and The Guardian highlighted the breach of research guidelines and public trust. Facebook’s lead scientist, Adam Kramer, later apologized, admitting the paper’s benefits “may not have justified all of this anxiety.” Yet today the stakes are even higher: algorithmic A/B tests routinely tune dopamine, oxytocin, serotonin, and endorphin loops at scale—fueling outrage and polarization more effectively than the crack epidemics of old. These covert psychological operations run daily across mainstream platforms, fracturing the Black community with far greater precision than the original 2012 study ever could.


Skinner Rats & Pavlov’s Dogs

Imagine your news feed as a modern-day Skinner box, complete with digital pellets and invisible shocks. In B.F. Skinner’s classic setup, rats learned to press levers to earn food rewards or avoid electric shocks, shaping behavior through operant conditioning. Meanwhile, Pavlov’s dogs salivated at the bell’s ring—cue and response hardwired. Fakebook’s algorithm is the new bell and lever, pressing our neurochemical triggers whenever it likes.


Hijacking DOSE

At its core, fakebook taps into our DOSE brain chemicals—Dopamine, Oxytocin, Serotonin, and Endorphins—to supercharge engagement. Each element:

  • Dopamine: spikes with unpredictable likes, delivering the thrill of anticipation.
  • Oxytocin: rises with digital intimacy, strengthening bonds through shares and comments.
  • Serotonin: rewards perceived social status when our posts gain traction.
  • Endorphins: numb frustration, making toxicity feel bearable.

These tailored bursts create a feedback loop more potent than any analog Pavlovian bell, ensuring we chase the next hit relentlessly.


Worse than Crack and Heroin?

Decades ago, crack and heroin were weaponized to fracture Black communities by hijacking our neurochemistry. fakebook’s emotional contagion study marks a new frontier: an algorithmic pill far more potent, with no hangover, feeding us dopamine and oxytocin in a cycle more relentless than any street-drug epidemic.


The Algorithm & Blues

Black sovereignists, Pan-Afrikanists, Black Nationalists, and suppposed Black Power advocates often champion Black self-determination, yet so many still scroll, click, rant, like, and feed the snakkkes. And it’s not just fakebook—it’s also ignant-gram, tricktok, linkedout, crapchat, jewtube, whatscrapp, telespam, piss-cord and others too many to mention. That algorithm & blues—constant churn of outrage bait and sensational posts—chains us to a platform designed to fracture our unity rather than build it. Right now they are pumping continental vs. diasporan while they laugh all the way to the bank at the same fragmentation that got us in this mess in the first place.


Abibitumi as Digital Liberation

Our answer is Abibitumi: a platform built by and for Black communities, free from fakebook and cesspool media’s emotional psy-ops. On Abibitumi, our DOSE chemicals celebrate genuine bonds, honest discourse, and community-driven narratives. We reclaim our algorithms and our joy, turning the page on the blues.


Contrary Diction

Baba Kamau Kambon dubbed the gap between our stated ideals and our digital habits “Contrary diction”—when our actions don’t match our professed ideology. We can’t preach Black Liberation while we feed the very algorithm that divides us. Our clicks must align with our convictions.


Reclaiming Our Digital Abibifahodie

It’s time to detox from fakebook’s emotional lab. Sign up on Abibitumi, redirect your DOSE, and watch your feed fuel liberation instead of division. Our community deserves platforms that uplift rather than exploit—let’s step into our digital Abibifahodie together.


Beyond signing up, here’s more you might want to explore:

Let’s escape the digital skinner boxes and turn our digital spaces into true extensions of our professed goals of Abibifahodie

Call to action: Download Abibitumi Apps and use them daily: 

https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.abibitumi.com.abibiapp

https://apps.apple.com/pl/app/abibitumi-com/id1641675386

Key References on the 2012 Facebook “Emotional Contagion” Experiment

  1. Kramer, A. D. I., Guillory, J. E., & Hancock, J. T. (2014). Experimental evidence of massive-scale emotional contagion through social networks. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 111(24), 8788–8790. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1320040111
  2. Goel, V. (2014, June 29). Facebook tinkers with users’ emotions in news feed experiment, stirring outcry. The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2014/06/30/technology/facebook-tinkers-with-users-emotions-in-news-feed-experiment-stirring-outcry.html
  3. Hern, A. (2014, June 30). Facebook users’ emotions ‘manipulated’ in research, says BBC. BBC News. https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-28051930
  4. Gibbs, S. (2014, June 30). Facebook emotion study breached ethical guidelines, researchers say. The Guardian. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2014/jun/30/facebook-emotion-study-breached-ethical-guidelines-researchers-say
  5. boyd, d. (2014, July 1). What does the Facebook experiment teach us? Medium. https://medium.com/message/what-does-the-facebook-experiment-teach-us-c858c08e287f
  6. Hill, K. (2014, June 28). Facebook manipulated 689,003 users’ emotions for science. Forbes. https://www.forbes.com/sites/kashmirhill/2014/06/28/facebook-manipulated-689003-users-emotions-for-science/
  7. Kastrenakes, J. (2014, June 29). Facebook and the ethics of user manipulation. TechCrunch. https://techcrunch.com/2014/06/29/facebook-and-the-ethics-of-user-manipulation/
  8. Molina, B. (2014, June 30). Facebook’s controversial study: What you need to know. USA Today. https://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/2014/06/30/facebook-study/11756525/
  9. Hunter, D. (2014, July 1). Consent and ethics in Facebook’s emotional manipulation study. Phys.org. . https://phys.org/news/2014-07-consent-ethics-facebook-emotional.html
  10. Slate Magazine. (2014, June 30). Facebook’s Unethical Experiment: It made news feeds happier or sadder to manipulate people’s emotions. https://slate.com/technology/2014/06/facebook-unethical-experiment-it-made-news-feeds-happier-or-sadder-to-manipulate-peoples-emotions.html

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Responses

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  1. While i knew there was some level of data manipulation on sukkkaberg’s site – it is clear that the digital skinner box has our folks acting in abnormal ways. Being rewarded for our own destruction.