Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Social media shapes new world order

Technology is providing people with ‘echo chambers’ where what you hear is what you want to hear, and this is profoundly influencin­g perception­s, writes MICHAEL MORRIS

-

EVERYBODY knows the future isn’t what it used to be – what’s changed is that we don’t know, or we know a whole lot less, about what everybody thinks it will be. If that doesn’t seem to be of any consequenc­e, one has only to consider the potentiall­y seismic outcomes of two globally significan­t polls this year; the Brexit result in Britain, and Donald Trump’s election in the US.

Neither was accurately foreseen, and nor were the forces that produced them properly appreciate­d.

And one of the key reasons, in the view of trends analyst Dion Chang, is the increasing yet under-estimated influence of the dynamics of social media behaviour across the world.

He said in an interview this week: “One of the biggest change agents today is social media – beyond the advertisin­g, the breaking news, the retail and all of that; it is a change agent in terms of polarising people by providing them with echo chambers, or the space to create echo chambers where what you hear is what you want to hear. This profoundly influences perception­s, and people get blinded and blindsided.”

A decade ago when – as Forbes contributi­ng writer Steve Olenski noted in 2013, “you may have heard of Facebook (but) you had no clue what a Tweet was” – it might popularly have been thought that the advent of untrammell­ed, easy-access forums for sharing informatio­n and opinion would herald an expansion of knowledge and a reinforcem­ent of universal humanist values.

The opposite appears to have happened.

In a penetratin­g Guardian article in July, “How technology disrupted the truth”, Katherine Viner wrote: “Social media has swallowed the news … ushering in an era when everyone has their own facts.”

And “everyone” in this context is a lot of people. The number of worldwide social media users has reached 1.9 billion and is expected to grow to some 2.5 billion by 2018. Facebook, according to Dave Chaffey of Smart Insights website, rules supreme, with more than 1.5 billion active users.

Pew Research Center’s Andrew Perrin writes that “nearly two-thirds of American adults (65 percent) use social networking sites, up from 7 percent when Pew began systematic­ally tracking social media usage in 2005”, noting that social media has influenced everything from work, politics and political deliberati­on to communicat­ion patterns around the world, how people get and share informatio­n or news about every possible aspect of living.

In every post-2000 upheaval or major news event – from the Arab Spring to the disruptive strategy of the Economic Freedom Fighters in Parliament, from terror attacks to the Fallist campaigns – the mobile phone, and the dizzyingly large networks they connect to, have proved potent not only as sources of informatio­n, but as a means of generating reactions, whether support or opposition, rage or ridicule.

In South Africa, mobile phone use has revolution­ised mass access to networks, informatio­n … and echo chambers.

And, Chang noted, the most critical feature of this was its impact on how society managed itself.

Viner noted in her Guardian piece in July that when a fact “begins to resemble whatever you feel is true, it becomes very difficult for anyone to tell the difference”.

In the Brexit campaign, she wrote, the leave campaign “took full advantage” of this. Viner cited leave-campaign donor Arron Banks’s candid assessment of the winning strategy.

“It was taking an American-style media approach,” Banks is quoted as saying.

“What they said early on was ‘Facts don’t work’, and that’s it. The remain campaign featured fact, fact, fact, fact, fact.

“It just doesn’t work. You have got to connect with people emotionall­y. It’s the Trump success.”

And, as emerged just a few weeks ago, it worked for Trump, too.

Chang said: “When your echo chamber becomes the truth, that is your reality, and that’s worrying.” This tended to be polarising, often generating the kind of xenophobic or nationalis­tic impulses that characteri­sed the political right.

“The way in which people are fed informatio­n really feeds into this, ins the dots.

“But if you are just a consumer of media, the chances are you will simply default into an echo chamber, and the effects of that are starting to manifest in unfolding events in the world.”

In turn, Chang argued, a discernibl­e trend in consumer sentiment showed that people were increasing­ly expecting business to go beyond the profit motive and demonstrat­e a willingnes­s to “push for positive change”, and reinforce values beyond the traditiona­l bottom-line benchmark of success.

Businesses were increasing­ly being judged on how they were run, and what they “stood for”.

“New, agile companies which are taking market share from traditiona­l big business have succeeded in defining themselves as having a greater purpose than profit – and the challenge to establishe­d business is to be certain of what their value is, and what their brand stands for, as a way of attracting a young, diverse workforce and client base”.

There was a “new world order”, he said, and one in which 20th century ways had become obsolete.

 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? In every post-2000 upheaval or major news event – from the Arab Spring to the disruptive strategy of the Economic Freedom Fighters in Parliament, from terror attacks to the Fallist campaigns – the cellphone, and the dizzyingly large networks they...
PICTURE: REUTERS In every post-2000 upheaval or major news event – from the Arab Spring to the disruptive strategy of the Economic Freedom Fighters in Parliament, from terror attacks to the Fallist campaigns – the cellphone, and the dizzyingly large networks they...
 ??  ?? Cellphone use has revolution­ised mass access to networks, informatio­n… and echo chambers, of which, as Dion Chang notes, the most critical feature has been its impact on how society manages itself. Katherine Viner wrote in July that when a fact “begins...
Cellphone use has revolution­ised mass access to networks, informatio­n… and echo chambers, of which, as Dion Chang notes, the most critical feature has been its impact on how society manages itself. Katherine Viner wrote in July that when a fact “begins...
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ?? PICTURE: AP ?? Technology is great for getting informatio­n, but make sure you verify what you see on your screen, says the writer.
PICTURE: AP Technology is great for getting informatio­n, but make sure you verify what you see on your screen, says the writer.
 ??  ?? Dion Chang
Dion Chang

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa