B: Notification flood is a difficult problem to be solved, and we don't know the solution just right now. People get too many notifications every day. Maybe AI could help us.
A: AI is a useful tool that could be used for many things, but if the person sets their notifications to silent, there's no way you can do. We could give permission to flash notifications across the screen, even though it's annoying, it's effective.
B: So I think the AI should understand our situation. For example, I am working and I'm busy writing a document. In such cases, notifications shouldn't appear. When I finish the document and send it, that's a nice time to show the notification.
A: It would defeat the purpose of flashing the notification on your screen. The purpose is to grabbing someone's attention when you need it. We need to stop whatever they're doing and make them attend to that call. Now, if I need you at 10:20 and you finish your work at 10:45 and AI allows the notification to come through then, it might be too late.
B: I see. So the AI should judge if it is urgent or not.
A: AI cannot judge if someone's work is urgent or not. The whole point is to show notifications in a way that will get someone's attention. But you're saying that notification would reduce their efficiency because they are distracted. Your solution is good, but it will defeat the purpose of sending a notification. If we have to wait for someone to finish their work before we tell them they need to join a meeting, then what's the point?
B: I ss. So we need to express if each notification is urgent or not. If it's urgent, it should pass through the blocking. If it's not urgent, it should wait until the target person finishes their current task.
A: Okay. In that situation, I think you would need to program it at your end.
B: Or we can use system to flag some emails as urgent.
A: I see, but many people set the urgent flag for every email.
B: I heard about an interesting idea. The sender of notifications should pay for it, and this is a kind of auction. The person who paid the most get the best priority of showing the notification. It's a kind of adjustment using the market mechanism. This mechanism can solve the problem of spam mail because spammers can't pay so much money.
A: That is a very radical idea.
B: The sender should pay for getting attention. You may think it's ridiculous, but in some situations, it will work for solving the flood of notifications. The flood of notifications is caused by people who can send notifications for free, so they easily send a lot of notifications.
A: It is a kind of thought experiment. I think there's a good intersection of economics and IT in this situation because once the element of payment is introduced, people will try to spend efficient the resources, and they are not going to misuse it. There will definitely be a shift in the activity. Unless the demand for those notifications is inelastic in that situation.
B: What does “Inelastic” mean?
A: Inelastic means the demand for notifications does not react to the price of those notifications, no matter what. In that situation, we'll say the demand is inelastic.
B: Ah, “not elastic”, I got it.
A: Yes, not elastic. It doesn't respond to the movement of prices. So whether the price goes up or goes down, it's still the same. In economics, we say it is inelastic.
B: I think, when some people become very busy, the price to get their attention will rise because of market mechanisms. And if the price is visualized, we can see the price before we send the message. We can understand if the person is currently busy. Sometimes we can ask it to other people, so the burden of notifications becomes flat.
A: You want equalize the burden.
B: Equalize, that’s what I wanted to say.
A: That could also work. Where did you hear of this idea?