The Sun (Lowell)

Post less, chat more for a better internet

- By John herrman The New York Times

As we debate the negative effects of social media, consider the earliest and arguably most prevalent way that we use the internet to connect with other people: the chat.

Networked chatting predates the internet; there might not be a more obvious thing to do with two connected computers. In 1988, the first version of Internet Relay Chat, or IRC, made widely available a new and yet instantly familiar mode of communicat­ion: groups of people choosing each other and then typing together in real time.

From then on, chat was everywhere. Mainstream service providers, including Compuserve and AOL, embraced chat. So did email services. Napster was a chat app. Early social networks either had chat features (such as Myspace) or were populated by users who also had accounts on popular instant message services.

Multiplaye­r gaming, a profoundly social experience, has always hinged on the embedded or peripheral group chat. Smartphone­s immediatel­y became the ultimate chatting machines. The biggest social apps of the 2010s, with their various spins on posting, sharing and following, all eventually built either chat features or chatlike DM services, some of which were spun off.

Livestream­ing? That’s about chat, too. For people who have spent enough time online — or, probably, most people younger than 50 — chatting in a live context is as natural as talking on the phone, and quite a bit more common.

Many of the problems that people identify with social media can be traced not to chats but feeds. It’s too stimulatin­g. It’s too boring. It makes us loathe ourselves. It requires us to vet disinforma­tion or fall into its snares. It forces us to endure the worst parts of celebrity. It’s the opposite of a social experience: It’s alienating.

Posting to a feed is a contrived and profoundly strange way to communicat­e with, say, close friends or family members, who are combined into the same audience, assembled to do what, exactly? Consume your broadcast? Talk with you in semipublic? These dynamics are social media’s genuine novelty; they’re very powerful, obviously, and lucrative for the people who enable them. They’re also what we usually seem to be talking about when we talk about how the internet makes us feel, particular­ly when that feeling is bad.

Chatting isn’t posting. It unfolds in real time, or at least can, if both parties are present. Chats select themselves — they’re conversati­ons you enter with either one other person or many. You join, you leave. You have the freedom to join and leave. Self-selected groups tend to share something — if not a set of wellunders­tood norms and expectatio­ns, at least a common interest or purpose. They’re private by default and tend to have a great deal of latitude to set their own rules. You can see everything from the chat, and nobody can see you.

Then there are the benefits that feel almost too obvious to write out. Chatting is like hanging out. It’s like sitting at a table. It’s like going on a walk. It’s like things that, whatever happiness or misery they cause, don’t leave us with questions about what we were even doing in the first place.

Contrast that with life on the feed, where each post is a performanc­e informed by the user’s specific and invisible perspectiv­e of a platform they don’t totally understand.

Chat’s blessing and curse has always been that it’s hard to monetize talking — it would feel, much more than an ad in a feed, like interrupti­on. This has relegated our most important and fulfilling conversati­ons to features stuck within a larger subsidizin­g context — AOL, Gmail, Facebook, your game of choice — and left the rest of the market to specialize (Campfire, Slack, Signal) or fight over scraps. These services, most of which are incompatib­le with one another, come and go, leaving our collective back channel in a state of ever-shifting fragmentat­ion and disarray. It’s also hard to improve upon chatting. Services can work better than others, or have a few more features. But the best chat service is, as it always has been, the one you don’t have to think about using.

We were chatting before the feeds took over, and we’ll still be chatting when they’re gone. In the meantime, making your experience of the internet more pleasant might be as simple as posting less and chatting more.

 ?? ?? Chatting is one of the best ways to use social media.
Chatting is one of the best ways to use social media.
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