SOCIAL & CULTURAL IMPLICATIONS OF NEW MEDIA
SOCIAL
& CULTURAL IMPLICATIONS OF NEW MEDIA
Social Media It is a relatively new feature of the modern
age. GeoCities was one of the Internet’s earliest social networking websites.
It appeared in November 1994, followed by Classmates in December 1995, Six
Degrees in May 1997, Open Diary in October 1998, LiveJournal in April 1999,
Ryze in October 2001, Friendster in March 2002, LinkedIn in May 2003, hi5 in
June 2003, MySpace in August 2003, Orkut in January 2004, Facebook in February
2004, Yahoo! 360° in March 2005, Bebo in July 2005, Twitter in July 2006,
Tumblr in February 2007, and Google+ in July 2011.
Information and communication technology has changed rapidly
over the past 20 years, with a key development being the emergence of social
media.
The pace of change is accelerating. For example, the
development of mobile technology has played an essential role in shaping the
impact of social media. Across the globe, mobile devices dominate in terms of
total minutes spent online. They put the means to connect anywhere, at any time
on any device in everyone’s hands.
The
Impact of Social Media on Society
Almost a quarter of the world’s population is now on
Facebook. In the U.S., nearly 80% of all internet users are on this platform.
Because social networks feed off interactions among people, they become more
powerful as they grow.
Thanks to the internet, each person with marginal views can
see that he’s not alone. And when these people find one another via social
media, they can do things — create memes, publications, and entire online
worlds that bolster their worldview, and then break into the mainstream. Without
social media, social, ethical, environmental, and political ills would have
minimal visibility. Increased visibility of issues has shifted the balance of
power from the hands of a few to the masses.
While social media activism brings an increased awareness
about societal issues, questions remain as to whether this awareness is
translating into real change. Some argue that social sharing has encouraged
people to use computers and mobile phones to express their concerns on social
issues without actually having to engage actively with campaigns in real life.
Their support is limited to pressing the ‘Like’ button or sharing content.
This passivity is a very human reaction when people are
given options that absolve them from the responsibility to act. A 2013 study by
the University of British Columbia’s Sauder School of Business found that when
people are presented with the option of ‘liking’ a social cause, they use this
to opt-out of actually committing time and money to a charitable cause. On the
other hand, when people are allowed to show support in private, they are more
likely to offer meaningful support by making a financial contribution.
The researchers found that a public endorsement is meant to
satisfy others’ opinions, whereas people who give in private do so because the
cause is aligned to their values. This peer pressure may be a factor in the
recent trend of political polls in the U.S. to misread voter intentions: people
who respond to the polls may be answering how they think the pollsters expect
or the way they think will please their peers, but in the privacy of the voting
booth (or at home with a mail-in ballot), they vote according to their true
preferences.
The
Impact of Social Media on Politics
A new study from Pew Research claims that about one in five
U.S. adults gets their political news primarily through social media. The study
also finds that those who do get their political news primarily through social
media tend to be less well-informed and more likely to be exposed to unproven
claims that people who get their news from traditional sources.
In comparison to other media, the influence of social media
in political campaigns has increased tremendously. Social networks play an
increasingly important role in electoral politics — first in the ultimately
unsuccessful candidacy of Howard Dean in 2003, then in the election of the
first African-American president in 2008, and again in the Twitter-driven
campaign of Donald Trump.
The
Impact of Social Media on Commerce
The rise of social media means it’s unusual to find an
organization that does not reach its customers and prospects through one social
media platform or another. Companies see the importance of using social media
to connect with customers and build revenue. Businesses have realized they can
use social media to generate insights, stimulate demand, and create targeted
product offerings. These functions are important in traditional brick-and-motor
businesses and, obviously, in the world of e-commerce.
Many studies suggest implementing social networks within the
workplace can strengthen knowledge sharing. The result is to improve project
management activities and enable the spread of specialized knowledge. Fully
implementing social technologies in the workplace removes boundaries,
eliminates silos, and can raise interaction and help create more highly skilled
and knowledgeable workers.
The Challenges of Social Media
Social Media is relatively a newer technology, hence, it is
a little difficult to establish its long-term good and bad consequences.
However, multiple researchers have concluded a strong relationship between
heavy use of social media platforms with an increase in risk of depression,
self-harm, anxiety, and loneliness.
Fear of Missing Out (FOMO)
Long-use of social media platforms make you addicted to
checking out what other people are doing. FOMO is an exacerbated feeling that
other people are living better lives or having more fun compared with you. This
feeling makes you check your notification every second, just to make yourself
feel better.
Cyberbullying
Teenagers need to fit in, to be popular, and to outdo
others. This process was challenging long before the advent of social media.
Add Facebook, Twitter, Snapchat, and Instagram into the mix, and you suddenly
have teenagers subjected to feeling pressure to grow up too fast in an online
world.
The Cyberbullying Institute’s 2019 survey of U.S. middle and
high school students found that over 36 percent report having been cyberbullied
at some point in their life, with 30 percent having been victimized twice or
more. It also found that almost 15 percent admitted to having cyberbullied
someone at least once, and nearly 11 percent admitting to doing it two or more
times. Teenagers can misuse social media platforms to spread rumors, share
videos aimed at destroying reputations, and to blackmail others.
Lack of Privacy
Stalking, identity theft, personal attacks, and misuse of
information are some of the threats faced by social media users. Most of the
time, the users themselves are to blame as they share content that should not
be in the public eye. The confusion arises from a lack of understanding of how
the private and public elements of an online profile actually work.
Unfortunately, by the time private content is deleted, it’s
usually too late. and the content can cause problems in people’s personal and
professional lives.
Comments
Post a Comment