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posted by mrpg on Monday October 30 2017, @03:15PM   Printer-friendly
from the idiot-web dept.

Social networks, though, have since colonized the web for television's values. From Facebook to Instagram, the medium refocuses our attention on videos and images, rewarding emotional appeals—'like' buttons—over rational ones. Instead of a quest for knowledge, it engages us in an endless zest for instant approval from an audience, for which we are constantly but unconsciouly performing. (It's telling that, while Google began life as a PhD thesis, Facebook started as a tool to judge classmates' appearances.) It reduces our curiosity by showing us exactly what we already want and think, based on our profiles and preferences. Enlightenment's motto of 'Dare to know' has become 'Dare not to care to know.'

It is a development that further proves the words of French philosopher Guy Debord, who wrote that, if pre-capitalism was about 'being', and capitalism about 'having', in late-capitalism what matters is only 'appearing'—appearing rich, happy, thoughtful, cool and cosmopolitan. It's hard to open Instagram without being struck by the accuracy of his diagnosis.

Now the challenge is to save Wikipedia and its promise of a free and open collection of all human knowledge amid the conquest of new and old television—how to collect and preserve knowledge when nobody cares to know. Television has even infected Wikipedia itself—today many of the most popular entries tend to revolve around television series or their cast.

This doesn't mean it is time to give up. But we need to understand that the decline of the web and thereby of the Wikipedia is part of a much larger civilizational shift which has just started to unfold.

Wired: How Social Media Endangers Knowledge


Original Submission

 
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  • (Score: 3, Informative) by Runaway1956 on Tuesday October 31 2017, @01:56AM

    by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday October 31 2017, @01:56AM (#589823) Journal

    I have to make a half-hearted objection, at least. Search engines, even poorly designed search engines, make it possible for you to find knowledge. You can use Google, or almost any other search engine to find facts, at the least, and knowledge if you care to dig.

    Social media? Facebook is an entertainment industry newcomer. They keep you preoccupied while they pick your pockets. There's a sucker born every minute, and Facebook is there to ensure that Facebook gets it's cut.

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