Thoughts on Technology and Language Revitalisation
Obviously, technology on its own will not revitalise or protect a language. But to dismiss it is rather foolish as the future of a language lies in the youth, not in the elderly or the middle-aged. If no young people decide to use the language or pass it on, then the language die. I think we all understand this.
We also probably understand that a significant part of young people’s lives is spent online or digitally. A language without a strong digital presence is one without much daily relevance for the youth.
Most social media networks and apps do not offer even some of the most commonly spoken languages in the world, let alone endangered ones. This harms these languages because even if a young person does know how to speak it or learnt at school to a tolerable level, if they cannot text their friends in it, use it to browse the web or use social media in it, they might be forgiven for viewing the language as belonging solely in an archaic or academic sphere and not well-suited for modern life. Furthermore, the likelihood of their continuing the use the language may be reduced.
When I talk about social media, I am not talking about Facebook and Twitter necessarily. I am talking about the social media that young people today use most such as TikTok, Snapchat, Instagram and even Tumblr. These platforms only support a few global languages and some major national or regional ones, effectively shutting out other languages from the lives of young people.
Even the traditional social media is not so conducive for endangered languages. Facebook recently discontinued its crowdsourced translation platform and Twitter discontinued its own long ago. WhatsApp is actually available in Irish, though. Localisation does cost money but is it really too much to include even Swahili or another major African language on an app? If they do not want to pay, many language activists would be happy to contribute anyway.
Signal has a crowdsourced translations platform.
Telegram also allows you to contribute to translations.
Reddit also has crowdsourced translations.
Mozilla also uses crowdsourced translations.
You can also type in your language on your phone using SwiftKey (and with predictive text too). A handy tip for those on iOS is to go to Language Settings -> preferred languages and drag your language to the top. This means that whenever your language is an option on a website or on an app, it will be displayed. It will also display date and time information in your language and should also force Google and Bing to be displayed in your language (if these browsers have been translated into your language by the companies). Windows is also available in many languages so visit the Settings section to see if yours is available.
Here is a guide to improving your language’s digital presence: