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The Social Media Upheaval (Encounter Intelligence Book 5) Kindle Edition
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherEncounter Books
- Publication dateMay 28, 2019
- File size428 KB
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- ASIN : B07PPJF26N
- Publisher : Encounter Books (May 28, 2019)
- Publication date : May 28, 2019
- Language : English
- File size : 428 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 70 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,110,989 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
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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.
It's quick, clear, highly readable, simple in style without being simplistic, jargon-free, and thoughtful without ever being pedantic.
If you have older children: I've been thinking about how to introduce my eleven year-old daughter to the dangers of social media before she's old enough to wander through that particular den of snakes, and I think this very short and clear book is it. We're going to sit around the house with grandma and grandpa and read it together as a family, over multiple copies, so we can discuss the topic. If I taught a high school civics course, or a freshman seminar at the college level, I'd assign this to my students and use it for classroom discussion.
Media anthropologist can take note of the important observation in regards to Professor Reynolds's changing interactions with the internet in conjunction with the evolution of our online culture. As observed, he was an early adopter of “going online” back when it was prominently a typography culture (reading text of blogs and HTML sites) to today’s social-media centered culture of decontextualized, image-sensory overload (videos, photos, podcasts, memes).
In the early stages of the internet’s heavily typographic culture, abstract thought and mindful reflection were encouraged since reading takes effort and careful deliberation - thus the quality of public discourse ensuing from the early internet culture was more rational and therefore more valuable. Fast forward to the emergence of today’s quick paced overstimulation of social media, and one can see how communication, contemplation, and contextualization is degraded into meaningless, incoherent, disposable chatter.
Media ethics can take note on the similarity of big tech’s parallel to the early age of television networks, whereby Facebook, Twitter, Youtube are not akin to Microsoft or Apple (for Microsoft and Apple aren’t media companies, because those businesses deal in software and hardware), but rather, these social media giants are more akin to early television’s Big Three of NBC, ABC and CBS.
It should be unsurprising, albeit wholly unintentional how Professor Reynolds mentioned that in order to re-acquire his peace of mind, he re-calibrated by returning to the simplest act of reading books. It re-affirms Neil Postman’s thesis on the superiority of reading for learning, thinking, and knowledge. Read this book.
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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.





