Communication Not Prevalent In Social Media

I posted a little while back about how I thought Facebook might lead to mis-education or dis-education due to the fact that we tend to associate ourselves with like-minded, and similarly educated people. Though this effect is not currently a huge problem, it seemed reasonable to me that our ever increasing online lives might take us to that point. In the comments it appeared that everyone who bothered to write something, wrote that I was crazy.

Well, maybe I wasn't so crazy. Take a look at this video:


Zuckerman is very much about connecting the world using the internet - but his presentation is all about how right now, even with our Facebooks and Twitters and realms of blogs, we are failing to communicate our ideas, information, and philosophies outside of our like-minded bubbles. In fact, we are currently worse off in the area of international news then we were 40 years ago.

The internet and social media certainly offer us the opportunity to create a global community, but its just a tool. As long as we continue to see language, culture, religion, philosophy, ideology, race, etc. as dividing walls, those tools will not help us accomplish anything in the area of communication or education.

Comments

Mat Chandler said…
I agree with where your going. It's like we are creating very non-diverse "classes" of people. Even if the people that make up your network of common influences and interactions have different skills sets, majors, etc., the idea of "like-minded" people is still the same. We naturally gravitate to those that we feel we can communicate ourselves to most easily I think, but therefore with that ever increasing lack of "interactivity," to different mindsets we will "soon" be talking to another version of ourselves. Diversity is what spawns cultures of greatness.
Kyle said…
Word. Misinformation can spread like wildfire amongst like-minded groups... within two or three days last semester, nearly my entire design studio was convinced that KFC raises genetically engineered "animals" with no heads or feet. While animal rights may be an issue this claim is completely untrue, even PETA fanatics would agree. But one person heard this ridiculous claim, told a bunch of vegetarians and fast-food boycotters in my class, and all of a sudden its TRUTH. I debated showing everyone a video (produced by PETA remarkably) that would have set everyone straight... but I found the whole situation too funny to correct.
Mat Chandler said…
Haha, I remember that...
Lindsey Hicks said…
I see where you're going with this, Matt. The only thing about it is that it assumes that ALL of your FB friends are just like you. Most people have friends from high school, college, random classes, work experiences, etc... There is something to be said for the diversity of your friends on Facebook. While my closest friends think in a similar way as I do, we all have different fields of interest and experiences that change each perspective. As far as Facebook goes, I have liberal and conservative friends posting articles about random things, constant random videos being posted, and even some thoughtful statuses. While Facebook should never be a real news source there are some valuable things that can be posted and shared...thats how I found our MJ died and NY killed thousands of geese because of airport interference. However, it's no NY Times, nor should it be.

Kyle- I think you had some extremely gullible people in that class, and you'd think that if they go to UF they'd be smarter and more skeptical to a KFC rumor that has been circulating since I was in high school. Aside from it being illegal to serve genetically engineered animals to consumers, wouldn't it be MORE expensive to do that than just buy real chickens?! haha
Copper_Ca$h001 said…
@ Matt- I agree with everybody, but isnt that why FB was invented? To unite 'like-minded' people together and sometimes otherwise random. But thinking that it decides who our friends are and who it 'recommends' to us is nothing but programming. Ultimately its up to the person to decide whether they have anything in common with their recommendations. FB is only a instrument of communication and nothing more, like a cell phone or a beeper (yes, you were able to send messages with beepers). To think that FB is an entity that is diluting our diversity is a clear sign of a misunderstanding seeing that people are the ones who press 'accept', not FB. All in all what im trying to get to is that FB cannot be blamed for social distortion.

@kyle- Genetically engineered or not, the double down is the best 'sandwich-like' invention.......ever.
Jonathan Yu said…
I agree with you. Facebook is a tool. You choose your friends.

It doesn't matter what Facebook was intended to do [If it was even intended to do that. I'm pretty sure it was supposed to be a way for college students to keep in touch]. The fact that communication among like-minded individuals is mostly limited to LIKES and posts on pages [Do people even read those?] means that most information will come from the friends you pick.

Plus, with Kyle's example, that could've easily been spread without social networking. The media's susceptible to this too; the Sherrod incident was a great example of that. It just depends on what you choose to believe at face value.
Matt C said…
This comment has been removed by the author.
Matt C said…
@Lindsey - you did a good job of explaining the diversity in Facebook right now, but its only 5 or so years old. Where will it be in 10 years? I never suggested that right this minute Facebook is making us stupid - my argument is that as our lives go "online", these technologies will make us stupid, and judgemental, and single-minded...because this is always an artifact of isolated communities. Is it so hard to imagine that the generation right behind us makes friends over Facebook before high school...so when they get into high school they just start hanging out with their Facebook friends? After all your main argument is that you had friends before you started Facebooking all the time - but what happens when people start Facebooking before they have lots of friends in reality?

@Lindsey & Copper_Ca$h001 - you're giving people in general WAY too much credit. Theres no more blindingly obvious example of human stupidity than the quickest look at our own government's effectiveness via the democratic vote. Shouldn't people understand that we need taxes to pay our debt? Shouldn't people understand that no serious problem is solved in 4 years (let alone 1)? Shouldn't people understand that parties don't matter, just the policies? Shouldn't people look up the vaguest list of policies before voting for a politician?

Obviously, of course, absolutely the answer to these questions is YES - but whats the reality? The reality is that the majority of this country is too stupid to take on that responsibility...whether a result of actual IQ or just plain apathy.


@Copper_Ca$h001 - you said "FB is only a instrument of communication and nothing more"

There are a bunch of reasons why this statement says nothing about the Facebook effect:

Based on your logic one should rhetorically ask: so the iPhone hasn't changed our culture? the TV hasn't changed our culture? newspapers didn't change our culture? These are all instruments of communication and nothing else.

Digital media is all about becoming more than the sum of their parts. Therefore, the intentions and the mechanics of a system like Facebook tells us very little about what effects it could or will have over our society.

Finally, it is a communication problem that we're discussing here. Therefore an instrument of communication is exactly the kind of device that could be involved with a communication problem.

Also you mention that people choose their friends, not Facebook. Thats again part of the problem itself. Most people - especially very young people - are far more likely to choose to communicate with someone similar in education, opinion, and culture....not someone with conflicting religious, political, or social views. In fact, if Facebook forced certain friendships then it wouldn't be such a problem - after all, the reason many of us grow culturally is because our geographical location forces us to become friends with different types of people (like Lindsey's mention of high school friends - you only have so many choices).

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