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I find myself much related to the article “Could social media be tearing us apart?”. The author argues, like traditional media, social media influence our minds in a way we may not have realized.
With a natural bond to political issues, with social media, it seems that opinions on all sides are amplified. Minorities are heard. Meanwhile, new trolls and terrorism grow. Social media gathers like-minded people. However, those connections made can trigger bigger debates. While in-person communication is usually less disarming, just as you may not argue much with people physically around you like you neighbors and friends, online communication can foster more argument. Social media is effective for whitewashing too. Social media has been
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The author argues, like traditional media, social media influence our minds in a way we may not have realized.
With a natural bond to political issues, with social media, it seems that opinions on all sides are amplified. Minorities are heard. Meanwhile, new trolls and terrorism grow. Social media gather like-minded people. However, those connections made can trigger bigger debates. While in-person communication is usually less disarming, just as you may not argue much with people physically around you like your neighbors and friends, online communication can foster more argument. Social media is effective for whitewashing too. Social media has been influencing again people in an unrealized way. Websites tend to expose you to the posts you have the best chance to respond according your browser statistics. Meanwhile, they take the opposing opinions out. Social media strengthens your own side of the
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During the most recent presidential election, I have seen several of my Facebook friends posting they unfriended all their Facebook friends who posted to support the other candidate. In this way, the other side of opinions was never heard by those people. At least on Facebook, they never see any Newsfeed representing the other side. Thus, without a full assessment of their opinions, they have amplified their own sides.
For the article “Is Google Making Us Stupid?”, the author argues that the advanced information technology, including the Internet and devices, have changed people’s mental and cognitive behaviors. Besides real-life examples of himself and others, Carr cites scientific references from researchers and sciences to make his argument more convincing. I personally have similar experience with Carr. I used to find it easy to immerse myself in an entire book. However, I do have found it harder to focus on one thing at a time as I age, maybe because I have been a more frequent user of the Internet and mobile
In fact “ nearly 4 in 10 people have taken steps to block or minimize the political content they see from other users.” This shows that people modify what things they see on social media and proves that political opinions have become much more popular to share on a personal profile. The shocking thing is that “overall 20% of social media users said they have modified their stance on a political issue because of material they saw on social media and 17% say social media has helped change their views about a specific candidate.” Pew Research Center goes on to say that people who have changed their political views on an issue stated that social media pointed their views in a more negative direction. This is important to acknowledge because knowing that the ideas that changed people’s mind on how they thought about a specific candidate were negative can lead to the assumption that the news they were reading could have been fake. Since these numbers are so low it can be hard to argue that the news people receive on social media is considerable enough to influence people’s opinions
If one stops and takes a look at our political system today, one could be surprised by the remarkable progress that we have accomplished in this great country of ours. Many people believe that all is good in the USA, and that our political system could not be any better than it is today. However, this isn't true, our political system is taking a dive towards the worst. Who might the culprit be behind this decline of the political system in America today? The answer to this, is none other than polarization and partisanship. One might wonder, how exactly does this spread? The answer lies in social media. Americans will be able to find common ground and become less polarized, in a political sense, if and only
Preview of Speech: Social media plays a huge role in our society, and it’s not a good thing. To understand its impact, we have to know a few things that come
Students are actively using social media, such as Facebook or Twitter, to express their views. However, in today's online conversations, it is rare to encounter people, who fully recognize and consider the other party's point-of-view. Most conversations online are limited by a certain number of characters. In some cases, people will exaggerate a situation, just to trash their opponent, and it is successful. As a result, online discussions often degenerate to vicious ad-hominem attacks (Herbst). And this has transferred to conversations on college campuses.
Social media can be seen from completely different aspects and points of views. A major role in these different opinions plays mostly the age of the beholder, because social media made an enormous change in the last 50 years. One very important aspect in our today’s society is to get as many information as possible in a very short time period ("Impacts of social media”) Through social media and especially social networks such as twitter and Facebook, the information gets spread extremely fast. There are for example reporters who search on those networks to get information for their news and articles. (“Impacts
In the article “Is Facebook Killing Our Souls?,” Shane Hipps insists that he has no enthusiasm for attempting to impede such technological developments; such action would be like attempting to oppose the wind or the tides. Rather, he wants users to comprehend them with insight. Assuming that we learn to wake up and understand, maybe we can make use of technologies instead of being utilize by them. According to Hipps, when we scroll through friends’ updates and posts,
Yellow journalism was a major issue in the late 1890s during the Spanish-American War. The purpose of yellow journalism is to use headlines and report sensational events that draws the attention of the audience in order to sell more newspapers, even if the facts used were not legitimate. Yellow journalism came to an end with the development of objective journalism, which reports facts that are not biased. With the rise of social media, yellow journalism and “fake news” are making a comeback and becoming a “norm” in modern society. The rise of social media is contributing to the amount of yellow journalism and fake news that is occurring, which is ultimately leading to party polarization.
As a logical consequence, Postmes and Brunsting (2002) reasoned that the Internet is changing society because people's cognitive processes, triggered by access to information and communication, replace the strong social ties that traditionally underpin committed activism. In simpler words, in the past, humanity used the herd instinct as the main driving force behind committed forms of activism. Thanks to the Internet, we climb another step or three on the evolutionary ladder, and simply do away with the herd instinct and replace it with reason. The argument, if put this way, does not sound particularly strong. What can be taken away is that social media is still evolving, that social media changes the way we – or most of us communicate, that social media is used in social and political activism, and that the Internet increases quantitative if not qualitative access to information.
Social media has changed the way people think and how they communicate. It’s incredible to see how social media has become such a big part of our daily lives. Just to think social media as we know it was birthed less than ten years ago in August 2003 with MySpace and has become such an integral part of our daily lives. Synonymous with checking our email we go to our Facebook for not only our daily gossip, but for up to date news and events.
Recently, people are now discussing how social media changes our life, whether it is good or bad. Some of them think that social media is a kind of fad because of its rapid development. Others think that it is really useful and makes our life easier than before.
Throughout the last decade, social media has drastically changed the way people interact with others. Websites like Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram have taken the world by storm. It has never been easier to have a conversation with family members, friends, or even strangers who live millions of miles away. Due to the rise of social media, people have become more aware of social issues and have become aware of the world around them. They can easily read the news online or catch up on the latest celebrity drama. Social media improves the way humans communicate because it allows ideas to be spread quickly and efficiently to a global audience.
Since the introduction of Social Media in 1997, Social Media has redefined and radically changed communication and has become an important part of modern day communication. Social Media has made people much more connected to the rest of the world. Furthermore, Social Media has allowed people to interact and stay connected with each other regardless of where they are in the world. Social Media has also allowed people to share information and opinions to a wide audience. In a recent large-scale study conducted by Common Sense Media, Teens spend up to 9 hours consuming media. Social Media has changed how we share information and consume information.
The social media is one of the most common ways of communication and pretty much of knowing anything and everything around the world these days, and it is growing very rapidly. It changes and affects each person in a different way, or ways. Some may argue that social media has a bad influence on children and young adults, and that it negatively effects their brains, character, or personalities, while most people see that the social media has a more positive effect on them than a negative one. Moreover, social media has helped many people around the world to connect, or re-connect, with each other, easily. Social media is basically the new way of keeping in touch with everything and everyone, and of even strengthening bonds between each
Social media has grown at phenomenal rates over the past decade, with its rise being easily visible in several fields such as publishing, business, and activism, among others. The rise of its use in the field of politics is well known by those who are on and off social media, as a result of increasing number of politicians using this global platform to their maximum advantage.
Today’s propaganda is maybe subtler and less obvious, but with the internet and advanced technologies of these past few decades, information can spread