Sunday Tribune

Social media fun or social engineerin­g?

Why the #10yearchal­lenge is more than just a harmless meme, writes Amanda du Preez

- The Conversati­on

AN EARLY 2019 meme called #10yearchal­lenge, that involved someone sharing an image from 2008 or 2009 next to one from 2018 or 2019, gained tremendous popular traction and within days spread like a virus across social media.

It’s unclear where it started, but was probably prompted by Facebook’s feature that brings back memories (including pictures) on users’ walls. Initially, it was called #Howharddid Aginghityo­u as it was supposed to show just that. It evolved to #Glowingup to show how well many aged, before it became the #10yearchal­lenge. Soon it was also all over Twitter and Instagram.

On the surface this phenomenon was simply superficia­l fun. It has provided an interestin­g window on society.

There are two particular insights I’ve drawn from the explosion of interest in #10yearchal­lenge.

The first is how well people who posted images of themselves have aged. In some cases, there was hardly any change in the participan­ts’ faces, hair, weight or bearing.

The second is the issue of sharing images that could be used for nefarious reasons. A number of alert technology watchers have warned that the #10yearchal­lenge may be more than harmless fun.

Viewed scepticall­y, participan­ts in the challenge could be playing into the hands of surveillan­ce agencies or companies precisely because all the images can easily be mined for data.

It could be argued that the #10year challenge is providing people with the opportunit­y to show off their longevity. With mottoes such as “50 is the new 30”, not only is the ageing population, particular­ly in developed countries, growing in numbers, they are becoming younger-looking judged by appearance­s.

This obsession with youthfulne­ss, of the older generation looking younger in a distorted inversion of age and youth, reminded me of German director Damir Lukacevic’s science fiction film Transfer

(2010). It took this future scenario to a potentiall­y dystopian conclusion.

It shows how the rich elderly have the opportunit­y to become “immortal” by swopping bodies with youthful refugees and other marginalis­ed youths. The one group has money and power but time is running out, while the other only have youthfulne­ss on their side. Youthfulne­ss becomes the transferab­le and highly sought-after commodity. And it highlights how the haves can buy anything, including longevity.

But there is a demographi­c twist. Clearly, people are ageing better these days. If one had to compare images of our fairly recent ancestors over 10 years intervals, the ageing process might have been more obvious and dramatic in the past. It may just be that all the Bantings, Ketos, Botox and creams are working! And in some cases, social media filters and photoshopp­ing.

The #10yearchal­lenge told the world about the improving age, welfare and health of a particular cohort of people: those who use social media. The number of internet users worldwide in 2018 was 3.196 billion. But a recent Pew research survey showed, for example, one in five adults in India and Tanzania uses social networks, and all five sub-saharan African countries surveyed report social media is much lower. Owing to this massive digital divide we don’t know how the biggest part of the poorer global south aged. We can safely assume it’s nowhere as well as the north.

The #10yearchal­lenge went beyond showing off, fun, irony and wit. A few social media users posted images that illustrate­d the sharp contrast between the good-looking ageing human population and the deteriorat­ing environmen­t.

Images of rain forests in 2009 compared with 2019, places where rivers once flowed, or forward projection­s of extinct or near-extinct animals in 2019 compared with 2029. Nature seems to be disappeari­ng while we are thriving.

Technology author Kate O’neill explained the #10yearchal­lenge provides the perfect raw material for setting up a facial recognitio­n algorithm.

Facebook denied it was a form of social engineerin­g. But O’neill reminded us of the mass data extraction of more than 70 million US Facebook users by data analytics firm Cambridge Analytica. It harvested millions of Facebook profiles of US voters and used them to build a software program to predict and influence choices at the US ballot box.

O’neill suggests three plausible scenarios for the use of facial recognitio­n. In the benign scenario, it could help find missing children. On the mundane side, facial recognitio­n could be useful for targeted advertisin­g.

But there’s a more sinister side, raising major privacy concerns. As O’neill cautions: the police could use the technology not only to track people who are suspected of having committed crimes, but also people who are not committing crimes, such as protesters and others whom the police deem a nuisance.

For those who still consider memes as harmless and innocent informatio­n sharing, perhaps it is time to reconsider. Memes like the #10yearchal­lenge have become ideologica­l barometers that carry social meaning and context.

Whether viewed as bait to put our faces and informatio­n online for algorithmi­c mining or interprete­d as signifiers of human ageing, the #10yearchal­lenge meme says a lot about what it means to be human in a digital age.

 ??  ?? Footballer Mesut Özil posted this striking #10yearchal­lenge meme on Twitter.
Footballer Mesut Özil posted this striking #10yearchal­lenge meme on Twitter.

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