Tuesday, 24 November 2009

The internet is not killing our culture

Today we had to prepare a media debate on if the internet is killing our culture. From my point of view, we had a clear win with our argument, with some of the opposition conceding defeat. My argument is as follows:

The internet isn't killing our culture. It is part of keeping our culture alive, as our traditions and behaviour are recorded on the Internet via pictures, websites and blogs. Not only are the representations of a culture available to us, they are available to everyone, so that other cultures may learn about our own, widening their knowledge. There are even examples of people storing our culture on the internet, as many have scanned through or copied material from books that may no longer be in existance, or are in short supply, but now will be preserved forever on databases and websites for all to see.

The Internet widens our knowledge, and if we really desire, our intelligence. We can look up information on almost anything, but it's up to the individual if they retain the information and put it to use. We can even share our own knowledge, and teach others. A good example is students researching information- such as for this debate. I doubt anyone could have come up with a clear and structured argument without the information provided by the internet. One of my team mates even posted this debate up on Facebook, and recieved smart and valid responses which aided her in her research.

Culture was already suffering before the internet came along. Is the death of the crappy sitcoms, bad Hollywoood movies and such, bad? I say power to the normal enthusiastic people creating amateur videos like the furby in the microwave. There’s going to be at least one person who learned a valuable lesson from it. If it's what people want to watch, why should we see it as a negative? I know I thought it was hilarious.

I found a person on a blog say "If the internet ever kills the video star, it’s only because he knocked off the radio star first." It's natural media evolution, this era's particular trend, and if it doesn't work out, things will change- though not necessarily to the way it was before the net.

This supposed cultural panic happens every time new technology comes out, an example being Sousa on the Menace of the Phonograph, where he claims "I foresee a marked deterioration in American music, and musical taste, an interruption in the musical development of the country", showing the rising panic in a new form of technology all the way back to 1906. We handled that new technology just fine, and even developed it- this cultural panic is mostly something to be ignored by those of us who are more able to adapt to new cultural changes, leaving those who are unable to stew in their own superfluous hysteria.

Another in the group used the analogy of the development of the farming industry to aid the example of technological development. She said that farmers use to have horses and ploughs doing all the work, taking a long time to achieve little. These days, the farmers have mechanical help such as JCB's, and get everything done at a better quality, and much faster. Her point was that this is a development just like anything else, and it would be an unfair step backwards should we take that technology off the farmers and force them back into hard labour for no reason. This is the same for the internet- would we take the internet off of people, just because some few may not agree with it, and force the masses back into slower, and much more difficult research, for no good reason?

Elitists spewing either stylized, biased, or commercial culture from a big black tower without possibility of revolt and no voice of dispute, is far more damaging than a democratized internet. The internet introduces a level playing field where we can all have a voice and shape the future culture to the way we want it.

Tuesday, 27 October 2009

The compulsive need to Facebook

On the first workshop a question was raised: What do you first look at online? I'm not entirely sure why everyones answers startled me, as they almost perfectly reflected my own. Facebook. Only a couple out of around 20 students said otherwise, though this seemed to be down to a conscientious objection rather than ignorance. I agree with Danah Boyd in her "Why Youth Heart Social Newtworking Sites" article -whether for or against, every teen has something to say about the popular networking sites.


Personally, although Facebook isn't the only window I open when first browsing, it is the most anticipated. Has anyone added me? Has that friend uploaded the photos of last night's party? Did that guy comment me back? Much time can be wasted pouring over event invites and conversations, keeping me up to date with my own little world and the people in it. Even the most trivial update of my friends television viewing habits are an opportunity to get going a conversation out of boredom, or the want to develop a closer relationship with the person by talking to them more often.


Can teens go on network sites too much? Of course, and by now the teenage population is bordering on obsessive when it comes to "poking" and marrying your best friend according to your info box. It has such a strong hold on teenage society, that it has become a joke in some respects, and has opened a gap for ribbing and parodying of its usage. An example is in a TeamFourStar's DragonBall Z Abridged episode on YouTube, where the quite serious character "Piccolo" randomly signs into MySpace because he's so lonely and bored training out in wastelands alone.
"Damnit I'm lonely. Might as well check MySpace" "No new comments"


"No friend requests. Damn it. Well at least I have you Tom- you're always there for me."


For anyone who watched Dragonball Z as a kid can see the humour behind such a stoic, friendless character social networking, when he lives in an empty wasteland and hates technology. The "Tom" line throws out a tid bit any MySpace user can appreciate, as we have all seen the countless profiles with the one friend: Tom. Unlike the character "Piccolo", one good reason a teen may have few friends on MySpace is because of it's rival: Facebook. With more applications and better ways to create events and tag photos, Facebook overtook MySpace in the social networking race, and gained more and more teens. I myself did the switch from MySpace to Facebook. Why? Was MySpace now inferior? To me, not really, but my friends seemed to believe it was "cooler", and of course, without friends to talk to anymore, MySpace had become an empty shell for me and therefore useless to its original purpose. Danah Boyd touches briefly on this, showing that teens are often on these sites because all their friends are there, and they're popular, making the social networking site profiles the Vans and Converse of the internet- if you don't have it, you're just not cool enough.