New age media
Today, social applications such as Twitter and Facebook determine more and more of what we know of the world.
Not so very long ago, mention of the media brought to mind images of men hunched over newsroom tables, and a bit later computers, finalising the material that would be imprinted at giant presses onto the pages of newsprint, making up the papers that landed on doorsteps each day. It is quite astonishing to think about the degree to which things have changed in a remarkably short period of time. Today, social applications such as Twitter and Facebook determine more and more of what we know of the world. For many, especially the young, they are rapidly becoming the primary source of information, as the internet turns into the window through which we look out on the world.
But we need to consider the impact of this. The world of instant information and immediate chat is now with us. The impact on conventional journalism is already visible. People who can ‘follow’ leaders on Twitter no longer need newsmen to bring to them information about their activities and ideas. Perhaps this is advantageous to some degree. But it is also a fact that it makes it far easier to spread rumour, propaganda and innuendo, creating new dangers. The conventional media has yet to respond to this new onslaught, and for now the final model of things can only be guessed at.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 4th, 2011.
But we need to consider the impact of this. The world of instant information and immediate chat is now with us. The impact on conventional journalism is already visible. People who can ‘follow’ leaders on Twitter no longer need newsmen to bring to them information about their activities and ideas. Perhaps this is advantageous to some degree. But it is also a fact that it makes it far easier to spread rumour, propaganda and innuendo, creating new dangers. The conventional media has yet to respond to this new onslaught, and for now the final model of things can only be guessed at.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 4th, 2011.