Everyone, it seems, uses Facebook and Twitter…and hates them. The Left hates them because the Russians used them to steal the 2016 presidential election from Hilary Clinton and give it to Donald Trump. (That’s the allegation anyway, highly improbable in my opinion.) The Right hates them because they censor and deplatform conservative speech. (A more probable allegation, in my opinion.) And because everyone hates them, everyone wants to reform them.
The Social Media Upheaval by Glenn Harlan Reynolds explains why social media have become so powerful and so hated in the last decade, as well as how to ameliorate their worst features. Reynolds is the Beauchamp Brogan Distinguished Professor of Law at the University of Tennessee. He blogs at InstaPundit.com—he’s known as the “Blogfather” whose links to other sites cause “Instalanches” of sudden, high-volume web traffic. He writes for such publications as The Atlantic, Forbes, Popular Mechanics, The Wall Street Journal, and USA Today. He lives in Knoxville, Tennessee.
The basic problem with social media, in Reynolds’ telling, is their design. “It’s almost as if the social media world was designed to spread viruses of the mind,” he writes, then cites Jaron Lanier’s work on “engagement.” As Lanier writes, “Engagement is not meant to serve any particular purpose other than its own enhancement, and yet the result is an unnatural global amplification of the ‘easy’ emotions, which happen to be the negative ones.” Combine the negative emotions with social media’s bandwagon effect and the tendency of users not to read past headlines, and you find that, in Reynolds’ words, “Social media makes people less informed but more partisan.”
That’s bad enough, but then you have to factor in the monopolistic nature of current social media. In the early days of the internet, blogs and chat boards existed at individual domains that you had to separately visit. Now, you never have to leave Facebook. There’s a clear upside to this, of course—ease of use. The downside is when Facebook begins to regulate who or what can make use of its platform. The same goes for Twitter and like-minded social media.
Because of this corporate censorship, deplatforming, and demonetization, some—such as Sen. Josh Hawley—have urged legislation to regulate content in a variety of ways. Reynolds has doubts about that from a First Amendment perspective, which I share. Instead, he urges legislation based on antitrust principles. He writes: “Policing platforms, and collusion among them…is likely to do more good than censorship. Antitrust scrutiny of monopolies and collusion will do more for the integrity of social media, and the protection of society from hysteria and misinformation, than regulation of content. And such antitrust regulation doesn’t raise the same First Amendment and free speech problems.”
At 64 pages, The Social Media Upheaval is a quick read and valuable for precisely that reason. If you’re worried about the negative effectives social media is having on American public discourse (and mental health), read it.
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The Social Media Upheaval (Encounter Intelligence, 5) Paperback – May 28, 2019
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Glenn Harlan Reynolds
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Glenn Harlan Reynolds
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Part of: Encounter Intelligence (7 Books)
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Print length68 pages
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LanguageEnglish
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PublisherEncounter Books
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Publication dateMay 28, 2019
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Reading age18 years and up
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Dimensions5.2 x 0.4 x 7.3 inches
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ISBN-10164177083X
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ISBN-13978-1641770835
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About the Author
Glenn Harlan Reynolds is the Beauchamp Brogan Distinguished Professor of Law at the University of Tennessee. He blogs at Instapundit.com and writes for such publications as the Atlantic, Forbes, Popular Mechanics, the Wall Street Journal, and USA Today. He lives in Knoxville, Tennessee.
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Product details
- Publisher : Encounter Books (May 28, 2019)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 68 pages
- ISBN-10 : 164177083X
- ISBN-13 : 978-1641770835
- Reading age : 18 years and up
- Item Weight : 4 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.2 x 0.4 x 7.3 inches
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- #357 in Media & Internet in Politics (Books)
- #447 in Social Media Guides
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Reviewed in the United States on July 1, 2019
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49 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on May 28, 2019
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The author, a prolific and popular blogger, USA Today columnist, and frequent TV guest pundit for the past two decades, has curated a set of concise, pointed quotes -- some his, many from others -- that accurately describe the symptoms of a widespread malaise regarding Facebook, Twitter and other social networks. Look at us -- have we lost our minds?
Yes, Reynolds writes in all seriousness. Just as haphazardly assembled cities once unwittingly bred lethal plagues, he sees today’s social media platforms as a viral breeding ground for the coinciding mental health epidemics that scholarly studies have already documented — not just among young adults, but at all ages.
Beyond the personal damage is the civic. Reynolds, a law professor, says viral outrage and retaliatory posts almost never meet the U.S. legal bar for “incitement,” but he admits that the online free speech he still champions frequently causes real-world harm. At the personal scale, careers are ended and lives shattered for one ill-considered joke. At the national scale, the reaction in political campaign circles to online meddling in the 2016 election is clearly, "We need to do that ourselves."
Rather than playing expert, Reynolds as a writer builds his case through excerpts from news articles, punchy opinion essays, and academic studies. You probably already know the gist of most, but the author — as much editor as writer in this book — constructs a structured, easily-read briefing punctuated by other writers’ well-honed prose. One accurately labels the “gleeful savagery” of online justice. Another bemoans that she now reads “more to be informed than to be immersed, much less to be transported.”
You may arrive at The Social Media Upheaval feeling you already know all this stuff, but you’ll leave with much better words to describe it.
Yes, Reynolds writes in all seriousness. Just as haphazardly assembled cities once unwittingly bred lethal plagues, he sees today’s social media platforms as a viral breeding ground for the coinciding mental health epidemics that scholarly studies have already documented — not just among young adults, but at all ages.
Beyond the personal damage is the civic. Reynolds, a law professor, says viral outrage and retaliatory posts almost never meet the U.S. legal bar for “incitement,” but he admits that the online free speech he still champions frequently causes real-world harm. At the personal scale, careers are ended and lives shattered for one ill-considered joke. At the national scale, the reaction in political campaign circles to online meddling in the 2016 election is clearly, "We need to do that ourselves."
Rather than playing expert, Reynolds as a writer builds his case through excerpts from news articles, punchy opinion essays, and academic studies. You probably already know the gist of most, but the author — as much editor as writer in this book — constructs a structured, easily-read briefing punctuated by other writers’ well-honed prose. One accurately labels the “gleeful savagery” of online justice. Another bemoans that she now reads “more to be informed than to be immersed, much less to be transported.”
You may arrive at The Social Media Upheaval feeling you already know all this stuff, but you’ll leave with much better words to describe it.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 1, 2019
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This book conveys several important ideas about social media, and is worth reading.
However, it is one of the worst prepared books I have ever read.
First, the publishers chose a typeface that is very poor for extended reading instead of one that helps read line after line (like Galliard, or Georgia, or even Times New Roman).
Second, they placed bold-face paragraphs in the middle of the normal paragraphs, with the bold text repeated in normal text a few lines or pages later. This is VERY distracting.
Third, they give no references for the numerous quotations in the text. This contradicts the author's well-stated position that one should not rely on brief portions of an article but should read the entire article to find out what the author really means. It would have been easy to provide the references to the full articles quoted in the book.
I would give this book five stars for the content, but the great difficulty in reading it is an important consideration.
However, it is one of the worst prepared books I have ever read.
First, the publishers chose a typeface that is very poor for extended reading instead of one that helps read line after line (like Galliard, or Georgia, or even Times New Roman).
Second, they placed bold-face paragraphs in the middle of the normal paragraphs, with the bold text repeated in normal text a few lines or pages later. This is VERY distracting.
Third, they give no references for the numerous quotations in the text. This contradicts the author's well-stated position that one should not rely on brief portions of an article but should read the entire article to find out what the author really means. It would have been easy to provide the references to the full articles quoted in the book.
I would give this book five stars for the content, but the great difficulty in reading it is an important consideration.
20 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries
Brett Mcsweeney
5.0 out of 5 stars
Typically brilliant and thought-provoking book from the "blog-father".
Reviewed in Australia on June 1, 2019Verified Purchase
This book is a condensed series of thoughts on a subject that the author knows more about than probably anyone else on earth. Glenn Reynold's Instapundit is one of the few enduring blogs from the early days. The short-hand blog post comments he provides to linked stories are evidence of a seriously smart, thoughtful and funny person.
There are so many thought-provoking points in this short book; they just come one after the other. Most authors would not make so many cogent observations in a lifetime of writing. A must-read for anyone serious about knowing the issues surrounding social media.
There are so many thought-provoking points in this short book; they just come one after the other. Most authors would not make so many cogent observations in a lifetime of writing. A must-read for anyone serious about knowing the issues surrounding social media.
Denyse O'Leary
5.0 out of 5 stars
Reynolds explains in a calm way the genuine danger the social media monopoly represents
Reviewed in Canada on July 11, 2019Verified Purchase
A zillion trolls ranting about articles and books they haven't read become a powerful political force, including a force for censorship, oppression, and disaster. He says, end the monopoly control. I say yes, that should be on the table.
Carlos's
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of my favorite writers
Reviewed in Canada on July 4, 2019Verified Purchase
I like reading what Glenn Reynolds has to say. He is always thoughtful and objective in the way he presents the argument. There’s no hyperbole or other kinds of ridiculous approaches in his reasoned, calm presentation. The short, very informed read.
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