San Francisco Chronicle

As Internet evolves, some old habits fade

The post-text future is here (you read that right)

- By Farhad Manjoo

Reading prose on a screen is going out of fashion. The defining narrative of our online moment concerns the decline of text, and the exploding reach and power of audio and video.

This multimedia Internet has been gaining on the textbased Internet for years. But last year, the story accelerate­d sharply, and now audio and video are unstoppabl­e. The most influentia­l communicat­ors online once worked on Web pages and blogs. They’re now making podcasts, Netflix shows, propaganda memes, Instagram and YouTube channels, and apps like HQ Trivia.

Consider the most compelling digital innovation­s now emerging: the talking assistants that were the hit of the holidays, Apple’s face-reading phone, artificial intelligen­ce to search photos or translate spoken language, and augmented reality — which inserts any digital image into a live view of your surroundin­gs.

These advances are all about cameras, microphone­s, your voice, your ears and your eyes. Together, they’re all sending us the same message: Welcome to the posttext future.

It’s not that text is going away altogether. Nothing online ever really dies, and text still has its hits — from Susan Fowler’s whistle-blow-

ing blog post last year about harassment at Uber to #MeToo, text was at the center of the most significan­t recent American social movement.

Still, we have only just begun to glimpse the deeper, more kinetic possibilit­ies of an online culture in which text recedes to the background, and sounds and images become the universal language.

The Internet was born in text because text was once the only format computers understood. Then we started giving machines eyes and ears — that is, smartphone­s were invented — and now we’ve provided them brains to decipher and manipulate multimedia. Suddenly the script flipped: Now it’s often easier to communicat­e with machines through images and sounds than through text.

It’s more than just talking to digital assistants. Artificial intelligen­ce might soon let us search and index much of the world’s repository of audio and video, giving sounds and pictures a power that has kept text dominant online for so long.

On HBO’s “Silicon Valley” last season, there was a joke about an app that helped you identify any cuisine, SeeFood. Weeks later, Pinterest introduced just such an app; along with Google, the social network is developing software to identify any visual object. Tech didn’t just make multimedia easier to produce. It also democratiz­ed non-text formats, which for so long had been accessible only to studios. Podcasting became something like the new blogging, a way for committed amateurs and obsessives to plumb the underexplo­red eddies and mysteries of life. There’s a podcast by a guy who spends more than a dozen episodes explicatin­g the genius of Kanye West’s fifth studio album. He does so using a trove of documentar­y material he found — where else? — on YouTube.

Meanwhile, social media showered every multimedia creator with a potential audience, and it allowed the audience to connect and discuss the work, deepening fans’ relationsh­ip to levels of obsession.

It’s a kind of passion that ultimately makes for a fundamenta­lly new, deeper kind of art. Look at all the room the Internet opened up for crazy mash-ups of ideas. Netflix’s best recent show, “American Vandal,” is a parody of “Serial,” the true-crime podcast, and “Making a Murderer,” another Netflix show.

The transition to multimedia won’t be smooth. Business models are hardly proven. For several news sites, the change to video ended in a bust that will now give Facebook and Google even greater market power. Many podcast advertiser­s — looking at you, Blue Apron — are themselves not on the most solid financial ground; they could blow up tomorrow, taking the whole boom with them.

Yet the financial questions may be the least of our worries. An online culture ruled by pictures and sounds rather than text is going to alter much about how we understand the world around us.

The haze of misinforma­tion hanging over online life will only darken under multimedia — think of your phone as a Hollywoodg­rade visual-effects studio that could be used to make anyone appear to say or do anything. The ability to search audio and video as easily as we search text means, effectivel­y, the end of any private space.

Then there’s the more basic question of how pictures and sounds alter how we think. An informatio­n system dominated by pictures and sounds prizes emotion over rationalit­y. It’s a world where slogans and memes have more sticking power than arguments. (Remind you of anyone?) And will someone please think of the children: Do you know how much power YouTube has over your kids? Are you afraid to find out?

But what are we going to do? There seems no going back now. For text, the writing is on the wall.

 ?? John Yuyi / New York Times ??
John Yuyi / New York Times

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