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Celerity

(44,058 posts)
Thu Jul 28, 2022, 07:45 PM Jul 2022

Yes, Social Media Really Is Undermining Democracy

Despite what Meta has to say.

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2022/07/social-media-harm-facebook-meta-response/670975/

https://archive.ph/DeZUH



Within the past 15 years, social media has insinuated itself into American life more deeply than food-delivery apps into our diets and microplastics into our bloodstreams. Look at stories about conflict, and it’s often lurking in the background. Recent articles on the rising dysfunction within progressive organizations point to the role of Twitter, Slack, and other platforms in prompting “endless and sprawling internal microbattles,” as The Intercept’s Ryan Grim put it, referring to the ACLU. At a far higher level of conflict, the congressional hearings about the January 6 insurrection show us how Donald Trump’s tweets summoned the mob to Washington and aimed it at the vice president. Far-right groups then used a variety of platforms to coordinate and carry out the attack.

Social media has changed life in America in a thousand ways, and nearly two out of three Americans now believe that these changes are for the worse. But academic researchers have not yet reached a consensus that social media is harmful. That’s been a boon to social-media companies such as Meta, which argues, as did tobacco companies, that the science is not “settled.” The lack of consensus leaves open the possibility that social media may not be very harmful. Perhaps we’ve fallen prey to yet another moral panic about a new technology and, as with television, we’ll worry about it less after a few decades of conflicting studies. A different possibility is that social media is quite harmful but is changing too quickly for social scientists to capture its effects.

The research community is built on a quasi-moral norm of scepticism: We begin by assuming the null hypothesis (in this case, that social media is not harmful), and we require researchers to show strong, statistically significant evidence in order to publish their findings. This takes time—a couple of years, typically, to conduct and publish a study; five or more years before review papers and meta-analyses come out; sometimes decades before scholars reach agreement. Social-media platforms, meanwhile, can change dramatically in just a few years. So even if social media really did begin to undermine democracy (and institutional trust and teen mental health) in the early 2010s, we should not expect social science to “settle” the matter until the 2030s. By then, the effects of social media will be radically different, and the harms done in earlier decades may be irreversible.

Let me back up. This spring, The Atlantic published my essay “Why the Past 10 Years of American Life Have Been Uniquely Stupid,” in which I argued that the best way to understand the chaos and fragmentation of American society is to see ourselves as citizens of Babel in the days after God rendered them unable to understand one another. I showed how a few small changes to the architecture of social-media platforms, implemented from 2009 to 2012, increased the virality of posts on those platforms, which then changed the nature of social relationships. People could spread rumors and half-truths more quickly, and they could more readily sort themselves into homogenous tribes. Even more important, in my view, was that social-media platforms such as Twitter and Facebook could now be used more easily by anyone to attack anyone. It was as if the platforms had passed out a billion little dart guns, and although most users didn’t want to shoot anyone, three kinds of people began darting others with abandon: the far right, the far left, and trolls.

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Yes, Social Media Really Is Undermining Democracy (Original Post) Celerity Jul 2022 OP
Totally agree..social media could be such a positive, and is sometimes. But too many times PortTack Jul 2022 #1
I would say rather ymetca Jul 2022 #2
I put Meta right up there with MAGA William769 Jul 2022 #3

PortTack

(32,872 posts)
1. Totally agree..social media could be such a positive, and is sometimes. But too many times
Thu Jul 28, 2022, 09:56 PM
Jul 2022

It only magnifies the negative

ymetca

(1,182 posts)
2. I would say rather
Fri Jul 29, 2022, 12:37 AM
Jul 2022

that social media is in the early stages of undoing the concept of disparate nation/states as the primary means of organizing human behavior.

Nobody on Earth really lives in an actual Democracy yet. Social media may very well become the means by which humanity may achieve it.

Hence, all the bugaboo about "globalists" and "the New World Order", as if the plutocrats don't already live in it. They just don't want to let the rest of us in their "elitist" club. The conspiracy of plutocracy, concocted between the royals and the rich merchants of bygone days, has given us "representative" governments, but always with some "House of Lords" by which they maintain control.

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