There
were days when people gathering at the village centre under the banyan shade
used to gossip about everything right from exchanging sundry news to inter- and
intra-religious conflicts to political bashing including slanders and whatnot. However,
with the advent of digital technology, this has been transferred to digital platform.
As a result, gossiping that was once carried out mostly among the known and
trusted people is today extended beyond acquaintances to even strangers.
Secondly, the gossiping that was oral and gone unrecorded earlier is now getting
recorded and is traceable even after years of uttering.
Facebook
and Twitter, having taken firm rooting in the fast spreading digital world,
have, of course, revolutionized
communication across communities and countries feeding information— albeit at
times replete with unwholesome information—and even shaking the nations from
their deep slumber. Indeed, the wave of
mass protests that swept across the Middle East in the beginning of 2011 were
considered to have been greatly aided by Information Communication
Technologies. The “Arab Spring” was often referred to as “Twitter Revolution”
or “Facebook Revolution”, for they were considered to have played a critical role
in communicating people with each other, that too, instantaneously. It is of
course, a different matter that there are considerable differences of opinion
about the role of social media in the success of Arab Spring.’
That
said, let us first take a look at the definitions of some of the important concepts
emerged along with the growing digital media. First is the ‘social media’: it
includes “groupware, online communities, peer-to-peer and media sharing
technologies, and networked gaming. Instant messaging, blogging, microblogging,
forums, email, virtual worlds, and social network sites are all genres of
social media.” They have broad reach and are highly accessible, and facilitate
not only rapid communication but also interactions and constant updating. And,
interestingly, all this happens at an economical price, for the consumers of
this media also act as its producers.
Next in
line is the science of ‘opinions.’ Posting of information in the social media
involves two stages: one, opinion formation, the first stage in which opinions
are formed; and the second is opinion expression stage in which people share
their opinions on the net. Opinions are subjective but they are also influenced
by factors such as advertising, preconceived expectations and social influence.
The Stanford Prison Experiment administered by Prof Philip G Zimbardo shows
that social context can easily and importantly, dramatically change our behaviour.
Which is why it is considered very easy to change our expression behaviour by
the social expectations.
And that
could be one reason why people do not share all the opinions that they form.
Which means, in the opinion sharing stage, one evaluates an opinion formed,
filters out those that cannot be shared and posts only those that one feels
comfortable to share with others. This feature of opinion sharing obviously
holds back many people from airing their opinions that go against the social
context, or the apparent interest of the opinion seekers. There is another
interesting phenomenon underlying the opinion expression: people whose opinions
run on the lines of social expectations are found to be highly vocal vis-à-vis
those whose opinions run against the context. This, at times, can lead to the
danger of the vocal minority overshadowing the opinion of the silent majority.
Not
surprisingly, what we usually see in the Facebook is what our friends share in it,
which otherwise means, a reflection of our own prejudices. Over it, Facebook
too plays its own trick: knowing our tastes, its algorithms show us more of what
we like to see so as to keep our eyeballs glued to the site. In this regard, we
must also note another interesting feature of the Facebook’s business model: it
doesn’t matter much to Facebook whether what it is showing to us is accurate or
not. It also acts as a vector for transmitting even political smears to the
intended few. Of course, these problems are sometimes exaggerated.
Incidentally, Facebook is not alone in this game. Even Twitter at times gets
politically polarised. Same is the case with Google, which shows targeted ads. So,
cumulatively, it is the accuracy that often gets a drubbing in the social
media.
The
significance of this indifference of social media for accuracy in what is being
made available for viewing can be appreciated from what Jim Carrey tweeted:
“that he is dumping his Facebook stock …because the social media giant profited
from Russian interference in the US presidential elections via spreading false
news with Russian origins…” Although Facebook has not responded to Carrey’s
tweet, its founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg has said, “Stemming the flow of
misinformation is among company’s foremost goals.”
A recent
study carried out by MIT’s laboratory for Social Machines revealed that false
stories travel faster and farther on Twitter than true stories. It seems false
stories were retweeted by more people than the true ones. According to the
researchers, false stories travel faster in social networks because they are
more appealing, for they are more novel than the true stories. Secondly, false stories, according to
researchers, are more likely to inspire emotions such as fear, disgust,
surprise, while genuine stuff provoke anticipation, sadness, joy and trust. In
short, they opine that people prefer to share stories that generate strong
negative reactions. Similarly, fake political news is said to be more prone to
go viral. The ongoing ruckus in the media about the role of Cambridge Analytica
in the politics is a pointer in this direction?
Against
this backdrop, if you look at the statistics of users—in America alone Facebook has 16.95 crore account
holders; Instagram has 10.47 crore account holders and Snap Chat has 8.65 crore
account holders—you get shuddered, for so many minds are getting hijacked by the digital media, that too by not so
accurate information. According to Centre
for Humane Technology (CHT) today we, sucked in by “like”, “share”, and
“follow” have virtually “fallen under the spell of the digital universe and
read and watch much more than we can digest, and provoke and outrage much more
than we can handle” and all this unfortunately happening under the belief that
“these actions are perfectly natural.”
The CHT even warns that “Facebook segregates us into echo chambers, fragmenting
our communities” while, Instagram, “glorifying the picture-perfect life, erodes
our self-worth.”
That,
however, does not mean that social media platforms are not beneficial in some
respects. For, there are no entry barriers, you can be anonymous, and you can
say anything and be yourself. But according
to CHT what is required to gain these advantages from the digital platforms is:
live the digital life more ‘intentionally’, else we may be, as Rebecca Solnit—a
feminist who coined the term: ‘mansplaining’—said, “taken away from a sense of
living in broader spaces, in deeper time.”
No comments:
Post a Comment