Poll
Should astrology apps be held accountable for spreading pseudo-science or celebrated for making it accessible?
As astrology apps surge in popularity among younger generations, a growing debate questions whether they normalize pseudoscience or democratize cosmic curiosity. Cast your vote on where accountability ends and accessibility begins.
Options
Live results
Vote first to see results.
Emoji reactions
No reaction selected.
Comments
Please sign in to comment.
Share / embed
Quick info
- How do I vote in the "Should astrology apps be held accountable for spreading pseudo-science or celebrated for making it accessible?" poll?
- Select one option on the page to cast your vote; results update with community votes in real time.
- Can I view results without voting?
- Yes. Use the "I don't know / Show results" option, or access the results summary after voting.
Similar polls
Up to 10 suggestions from the same category and shared tags, sorted by vote count; this poll is excluded.
From the same category
Astrology and HoroscopesThe same site category as this poll.
- Are sun signs becoming outdated in modern astrology
- Can two water signs really fall in love?
- Are sun sign horoscopes making people ignore their full birth chart—and does it matter?
- Are rising living costs changing how much you spend on weekly horoscope apps?
- Are you turning to astrology for climate anxiety or career clarity this year?
- With climate anxiety rising, do you check your horoscope for advice on sustainability?
- How are you using astrology to cope with supply chain stress at home?
- Is it bad luck to ignore your zodiac compatibility chart?
- Do horoscopes actually work or is it just luck
- Have astrologers changed how they talk about the future since 2025 began?
TrendVersus.com · live data