Robinhood is a commission-free brokerage app for trading stocks, options, and crypto. You can install a blocker, but you hold the keys — and at the wrong
hour you’ll use them. Electric Nipple Clamps takes a different route: instead of a
wall, a witness.
Refreshing the portfolio forty times before lunch isn’t investing — it’s a loop. And a
blocker you can switch off the second the market opens isn’t going to break it.
Add Robinhood to your watch list and name one person you trust. When you open it, they
see the count — never the trades, the balance, or what’s on the screen, just how often
you reached for it last week. You can delete the app in a weak moment. You can’t
un-tell someone who already knows.
Screen Time or a blocker can hide Robinhood, but you control it, so it disappears the moment the market opens and the itch hits. Electric Nipple Clamps instead adds Robinhood to a watch list one trusted person can see — a weekly count of how often you opened it that you can't quietly undo.
How do I stop compulsively checking Robinhood?
Start by naming the pattern: most compulsive checking happens alone and unseen. Adding one person who sees a weekly count changes the math — you're no longer doing it in private. Pair that with turning off price-change push notifications.
Does an accountability app see my trades or portfolio?
No. It's content-blind. The person you choose sees category-level counts only — never your positions, balances, tickers, or anything on your screen.