I have chosen to do an analysis on social networking sites. Now, many may not consider this a technology in the same vein as television or Internet. However I believe it’s influence has the same effect, although admittedly not on the same scale, but they both change or, perhaps more accurately, created a culture. Social networking site such as Myspace, and, more so Facebook, have taken over the Internet. Facebook has more than 100 million people using it around the world. It has also taken over many Teenagers social lives and, in my experience, consumes double-digit hours a week. Clicking on friends and strangers pages and feeling connected but really being more alone than ever. The problem is not the technology itself; it is how it is misused. Many people on Facebook (mostly teenagers and college students) use it as the focus of their relationships with some people. They post on their walls and send messages instead of spending time with them and feel close, but they are not. What Facebook and other social networking site like it are for is relationship boosters and acquaintance counting. What I mean by this is that Facebook is good medium for people who already know each other well to keep in touch and co-ordinate plans; that is all it is, a medium. However, many people us it as much more, make friends online that they don’t really know in real life and building a relationship with that through the technology. The fact is nothing compares to real life face to face contact when it comes to getting to know people and having someone really know you. Everyone wants to have 1000 friends, but that is impossible and if you aspire to this you will find yourself more alone than ever. Think about this, they have population caps on high schools so teens can feel like they have some identity; that cap is a few thousand. Facebook has more than 100 million users. Being afloat on the sea of social networking can drown you.
Work Cited
“Our first 100 million”, The Facebook Blog, 26 August 2008. 28 September 2008
1 comment:
"Being afloat on the sea of social networking can drown you."
Brilliant.
I like that you chose to write about this, because it is so true. It's kind of like defense mechanism for most people, so as not to put themselves directly out in the open, vulnerable to public scrutiny. Ironically, more people, as you said, can see what they are doing or saying; 1000's versus millions.
cool, good writing
jules
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