The world is seemingly in crisis, with social and political upheaval having dominated the news agenda for several years. Much of the blame for this is laid at the feet of the social media giants, notably Facebook and Twitter, for creating platforms that fragment society and encourage extremism. In the opening episode of Season Five of the Digital Download Podcast, I talk to digital technologist and former manager of the BBC's DigiLab Euan Semple about the current social media environment and what the future looks like. We discuss how much of the responsibility to improve things lies with the social networks, and how much of that lies squarely at the feet of us, the people who use it. Here's what is discussed in this episode: The development of online conversation over the last ten years How the internet is a mirror of humanity Whether social media exacerbates the worst in people Whether regulation would have any impact on social media behaviour Why the distinction between on and offline life is irrelevant How technology has evolved too fast for humanity to adapt to the responsibilities it necessitates Why we have to be responsible not only for what we pay attention to online, but also what we respond to How the internet is full of people telling others what to think or believe or do Whether social media does more harm than good How much responsibility communicators, marketers and organisation have Why the mechanisms of marketing and social algorithms are deeply flawed What to do Next Subscribe to the podcast to receive new episodes automatically to your mobile or email. And if you enjoyed today’s show, please email it to a friend and/or share it on your favourite social media channels. I'd love to hear from you with any comments or thoughts. I read and reply to every single email, tweet or message. And finally, it would also be very awesome and hugely appreciated if you'd be able to take a moment to leave an honest review and rating for the podcast on iTunes, as this helps others discover Digital Download. Thanks for listening!
Information
- Show
- FrequencyUpdated fortnightly
- Published22 September 2019 at 11:26 UTC
- Length28 min
- RatingClean