On Thu, Sep 17, 2009 at 8:24 AM, Jerry Johnson <[email protected]> wrote:
> We have segmented into tiny little enclaves of like-minded people, who
> seldom venture out of their comfort zone.
>
> And although it is great in some ways, we have lost that common fabric, and
> have not replaced it with anything.
>
> And that cannot be good.

I honestly think it is a mixed bag. The downsides you've covered
fairly well, I think. But there are upsides as well. The problem with
having only 3 news broadcasts, for instance, is that it makes it even
more likely that the viewpoints that people have access to will be
homogeneous. A diversity of opinion and coverage has a lot to be said
for it. If the coverage happens to cover what you are interested in,
then great. If not, then you are SOL. I think that analysis of
television news, however, is the weakest case as television is still
an expensive medium to produce and the influence of the corporations
behind it is felt strongly enough that it tends to weed out a fair bit
of diversity that we might find in a less cost-intensive medium (like
the Internet).

The new diversity has also yielded benefits in the area of
proliferation of specialty channels like the Discovery Channel(s),
National Geographic(s), niche sports channels like Fox Soccer Channel,
etc that provide access to programming that would have been
inconceivable 30 years ago.

Really, though, I think that the commodification of communication
comes into its own the most (both good and bad) with the Internet.
This mailing list is an excellent example. People are creating
communities based on interest rather than geography. This has the
potential side effect of become echo chambers but also holds promise
for connecting people that might also never have the chance for a
community based on geography.

For instance, the Internet has opened up possibilities for sexual
minorities that never existed before. Being queer or kinky in a number
of parts of the world (and this country) is a kind of dangerous
proposition. The Internet has allowed people to connect with
individuals from afar and get support and information that they never
would have before. And this, in turn, has actually lead to an increase
in the number of local, in person, groups catering to those
communities because it has created a less scary, low barrier to entry
way to find and connect with local people with similar interests.

Information technology is enabling a wide variety of social changes.
That has its upsides and its downsides, but I think we would be remiss
if we just pined at "the way things were" and romanticized the past
without looking at the downsides to the way things were and the
benefits we've gained from the changes. Still very much a work in
progress though, but hey, that's life.

Judah

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