Improper Media (Essay #4: Re-edited)
Media wraps us up like a big bubble. Kind of like those giant hamster bubbles but for humans.
Every person has a slightly different central bubble of media but we all have one. Our bubble depends a lot on what apps we use every day to see what others are up to...
depending on where we live...
and depending where we get our news from.
With that, we gain these kind of ‘media goggles’, where we only see what we see from the medias that supply that information for us. These media sources differ for everyone, meaning that we have a different vision when it comes to our media and also our life. That bubble can sometimes be a good thing but with things like filter bubbles and fake news, our media goggles can be altered from actual reality.
First starting off with the public sphere, German sociologist Jürgen Habermas describes it as an area in social life where individuals can come together to freely discuss and identify societal problems, and through that discussion influence political action.
He also discusses three different kinds of spheres. “These are the private sphere [consisting of family and economy], the sphere of public authority [consisting of state and judiciary], and the bourgeois public sphere” (Devereaux, 109). Social media is the perfect place for the public sphere to happen.
We see celebrities posting all of the time on Instagram, Twitter, etc. about certain causes all of the time because they know they have an influence with their amount of followers. They post how one can donate to a certain cause and with that media platform, they discuss and identify societal problems and then influence action from that.
Going back to our discussion of ‘media goggles’, we also encounter ‘filter bubbles’. The term ‘filter bubble’ was originally coined by internet activist Eli Pariser whom first spoke of the term in his book. Pariser defined his concept of a filter bubble as "that personal ecosystem of information that's been catered by these algorithms". In longer terms, Eli Pariser is saying that an internet user's past browsing and search history is built up over time when that user indicates their interest in topics by "clicking links, viewing friends, putting movies in [their] queue, reading news stories", and so forth.
An internet firm then uses this information to target advertising to that specific user, or make certain types of information appear more prominently in search results pages.
These filter bubbles are easy to live in because the internet is forcing us to blend with people who like the same things and think the same way as the person viewing the content. It’s easier to find people who view the same things as you but you lose having a worldly view of someone who may not have the same views as you. Someone that could challenge your views. The largest concern is that internet users with have no ‘common basis for agreement’ or connection when their flows of information are so polarized. Basically what is happening is that our information is getting segregated based on what we may have past researched or simply Googled and that shouldn’t divide our information unfairly like that.
As well as our information being separated, we are also facing the challenge of ‘fake news’.
You can’t go through an article about news without something coming up about the topic of fake news. Fake news is literally what it sounds like. News that is fake to deliberately push on misinformation and causes people with that misinformation to go about spreading that fake news to others, mostly via social media. It’s main purpose is for it to be written and published with intent to mislead others in order to damage the public image of something or someone. Recently, it has even been a part of broadcast news media as well, more than ever with the latest presidential election with fake news being slandered back and forth from both parties.
Michael Radutzky, one of the producers of CBS’ 60 Minutes, has said that his show considers fake news to be “stories that are probably false, have enormous traction [popular appeal] in the culture, and are consumed by millions of people”. Big companies like Facebook are working to expel more and more fake news articles from one's’ Facebook timeline. It’s hard to balance how nice it is to report items on social media but also balancing how to differentiate the real from the fake. “The convenience and effectiveness of social media to reach the masses dramatically impacts the way journalists access information” (Devereaux, 289)
In conclusion, recently in the world of social media, we have had several things alter our perception of the outside world because of the segregation of our media due to ‘filter bubbles’ and also the false announcements that ‘fake news’ brings to our media.