Well this week has been pretty
well educating. I went from having a pretty negative perspective on a lot of
social media platforms and ideas, to having a more positive understanding view
on them. Our discussions in class are captivating, as we can all address each
other’s concerns and doubts. Within a group of so many people actively studying
the psychology behind social media, many different perspectives are gathered
between us all to contribute towards an unbiased perspective. And it is exactly
this environment that has caused me to change my entire attitude towards social
media and the use of technology today. I no longer look at it with a
condescending view or try to deny having used facebook
recently, because now I am more knowledgeable in WHEN and HOW I use it, so it
is beneficial instead of time-wasting.
This is
how I often feel when using social media platforms:
Some of
the biggest problems associated with internet and social media use are:
Cyber-bullying, pornography, slacktivism, time-wasting, addiction, video-game
violence, and other crime. ^_~ We have been able to study these problems during
class, and share multiple articles and sources to support our research, which
led me to become pretty well negative about it all. Honestly, I didn’t really
want a lot to do with technology after that.
But
then, we began to spend a lot of time talking about altruism and slacktivism. While
altruism is described as the unselfish devotion to the welfare of others, it is
used in social media to describe how social network users readily share
information that might be useful to other users. After touching on altruism, we
began studying slacktivism, which (according to Wikipedia) is “usually considered
a pejorative term that describes ‘feel-good’ measures, in support of an issue
or social cause, that have little or no practical effect other than to make the
person doing it take satisfaction from the feeling they have contributed.” Slacktivism
is typically associated with signing internet petitions, reposting information
for charity organizations, or joining supportive groups by just clicking ‘like’
on a page. These actions are generally viewed as wasted energy, given that they
all require minimal energy to begin with because they almost never gain the
results expected by its critics.
I
believe slacktivism is viewed from the wrong perspective. If we view it as
something that its not, then of course we are going to get a bad impression of
it! One must understand that slacktivism is not a means through which the
founders would expect true change to occur. I believe the true purpose of
slacktivism is to spread the word, share the idea, make it known so that those
with the resources necessary might be able to find out about it and then react.
So slacktivism, in itself, is beneficial when viewed as solely the medium
through which information is relayed.
Still
not convinced? Take a gander here: In
defense of #BringBackOurGirls and ‘slacktivism’