📌 WEEK 6 POST: Are You Actually a Good Digital Citizen? (No, Seriously) 🌐
You follow the news. You share petitions. You've subtweeted a politician. Congrats — you're participating in digital citizenship. But what does that actually mean, and why does it matter?
Week 6 broke down digital citizenship, basically how people use the internet responsibly and ethically to participate in society. It's not just about avoiding scams or not cyberbullying (though yes, those too). Suing et al. (2024) define digital citizenship as people's participation in managing their rights and civic engagements online but they also point out that definitions often clash with reality due to limited digital literacy skills and unequal access to technology. So being a digital citizen isn't as simple as just being online.
It covers six key elements: contributing positively online, political participation, activism outside elections, responsible social media use, ethical behaviour, and having the skills and access to use digital tools. In Malaysia, this is actively guided by MCMC's Klik Dengan Bijak campaign, which promotes safe and responsible internet use nationwide (Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission [MCMC], 2024).
Platforms aren't neutral — that's where platformisation comes in.
Platformisation describes how digital platforms have become so embedded in daily life that they now dominate public discourse, shape access to information, and influence political content (Fischer & Jarren, 2024). In other words, when TikTok or Instagram decides what you see, they're not just running an app, they're shaping what society thinks and talks about. Fischer and Jarren (2024) warn that journalistic values relevant to democracy are being replaced by platform-driven, attention-seeking business models. That's a serious problem.
And then there's hashtag activism.
Hashtags like #BlackLivesMatter, #MeToo, and #ClimateChange don't just organise content — they build communities. Theocharis et al. (2023) found that social media has reshaped political engagement entirely — sharing petitions, following political figures, commenting, forwarding news — these are now all legitimate forms of political participation. Political engagement is shifting from long-term party membership to flexible, issue-based action online.
Being online IS being a citizen now. The question is what kind.
References: Fischer, R., & Jarren, O. (2024). The platformization of the public sphere and its challenge to democracy. Philosophy & Social Criticism, 50(1), 200–215.https://doi.org/10.1177/01914537231203535
Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC). (2024). Klik dengan bijak. https://www.komunikasi.gov.my/en/program-semasa/23446-klik-dengan-bijak-main-peranan-penting-pastikan-keselamatan-rakyat-malaysia-terjamin-semasa-berada-di-dalam-talian
Suing, A., Alarcon-Llontop, L.-R., & Bizberge, A. (2024). Appreciations and practices of digital citizenship in the Andean community. Frontiers in Communication, 9, Article 1336528. https://doi.org/10.3389/fcomm.2024.1336528
Theocharis, Y., Boulianne, S., Koc-Michalska, K., & Bimber, B. (2023). Platform affordances and political participation: How social media reshape political engagement. West European Politics, 46(4), 788–811. https://doi.org/10.1080/01402382.2022.2087410













